Prehospital needle decompression associated with lower risk of mortality in trauma patients
Prehospital needle decompression (PHND) was associated with a lower risk of mortality in trauma patients suggests a recent study published in the JAMA Surgery.
Prehospital needle decompression (PHND) is a rare but potentially life-saving procedure. Prior studies on chest decompression in trauma patients have been small, limited to single institutions or emergency medical services (EMS) agencies, and lacked appropriate comparator groups, making the effectiveness of this intervention uncertain.
A study was conducted to determine the association of PHND with early mortality in patients requiring emergent chest decompression.
This was a retrospective cohort study conducted from January 1, 2000, to March 18, 2020, using the Pennsylvania Trauma Outcomes Study database. Patients older than 15 years who were transported from the scene of injury were included in the analysis. Data were analyzed between April 28, 2021, and September 18, 2021.
Patients without PHND but undergoing tube thoracostomy within 15 minutes of arrival at the trauma center were the comparison group that may have benefited from PHND.Mixed-effect logistic regression was used to determine the variability in PHND between patient and EMS agency factors, as well as the association between risk-adjusted 24-hour mortality and PHND, accounting for clustering by center and year. Propensity score matching, instrumental variable analysis using EMS agency-level PHND proportion, and several sensitivity analyses were performed to address potential bias.
The Results of the study are:
- A total of 8469 patients were included in this study; 1337 patients (11%) had PHND, and 7132 patients (84.2%) had emergent tube thoracostomy.
- PHND rates were stable over the study period between 0.2% and 0.5%. Patient factors accounted for 43% of the variation in PHND rates, whereas EMS agency accounted for 57% of the variation.
- PHND was associated with a 25% decrease in odds of 24-hour mortality.
- Similar results were found in patients who survived their ED stay, excluding severe traumatic brain injury, and restricted to patients with severe chest injury
- PHND was also associated with lower odds of 24-hour mortality after propensity matching when restricting matches to the same EMS agency and in instrumental variable probit regression
Thus, in this cohort study, Prehospital needle decompression was associated with lower 24-hour mortality compared with emergent trauma center chest tube placement in trauma patients. Although performed rarely, PHND can be a life-saving intervention and should be reinforced in EMS education for appropriately selected trauma patients.
Reference:
Muchnok D, Vargo A, Deeb A, Guyette FX, Brown JB. Association of Prehospital Needle Decompression With Mortality Among Injured Patients Requiring Emergency Chest Decompression. JAMA Surg. Published online August 17, 2022. doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2022.3552
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