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Popliteal scoring assessment for vascular extremity injuries in trauma study.

Authors :
O'Banion, Leigh Ann
Dirks, Rachel
Farooqui, Emaad
Saldana-Ruiz, Nallely
Yoon, William J.
Pozolo, Cara
Fox, Charles
Crally, Alexis
Siada, Sammy
Nehler, Mark R.
Brooke, Benjamin S.
Beckstrom, Julie L.
Kiang, Sharon
Boggs, Hans K.
Chandra, Venita
Ho, Vy T.
Zhou, Wei
Lee, Ashton
Bowens, Nina
Cho, Yan
Source :
Journal of Vascular Surgery; Sep2021, Vol. 74 Issue 3, p804-804, 1p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Traumatic popliteal vascular injuries are associated with the highest risk of limb loss of all peripheral vascular injuries. A method to evaluate the predictors of amputation is needed because previous scores could not be validated. In the present study, we aimed to provide a simplified scoring system (POPSAVEIT [popliteal scoring assessment for vascular extremity injuries in trauma]) that could be used preoperatively to risk stratify patients with traumatic popliteal vascular injuries for amputation. A review of patients sustaining traumatic popliteal artery injuries was performed. Patients requiring amputation were compared with those with limb salvage at the last follow-up. Of these patients, 80% were randomly assigned to a training group for score generation and 20% to a testing group for validation. Significant predictors of amputation (P <.1) on univariate analysis were included in a multivariable analysis. Those with P <.05 on multivariable analysis were assigned points according to the relative value of their odds ratios (ORs). Receiver operating characteristic curves were generated to determine low- vs high-risk scores. An area under the curve of >0.65 was considered adequate for validation. A total of 355 patients were included, with an overall amputation rate of 16%. On multivariate regression analysis, the risk factors independently associated with amputation in the final model were as follows: systolic blood pressure <90 mm Hg (OR, 3.2; P =.027; 1 point), associated orthopedic injury (OR, 4.9; P =.014; 2 points), and a lack of preoperative pedal Doppler signals (OR, 5.5; P =.002; 2 points [or 1 point for a lack of palpable pedal pulses if Doppler signal data were unavailable]). A score of ≥3 was found to maximize the sensitivity (85%) and specificity (49%) for a high risk of amputation. The receiver operating characteristic curve for the validation group had an area under the curve of 0.750, meeting the threshold for score validation. The POPSAVEIT score provides a simple and practical method to effectively stratify patients preoperatively into low- and high-risk major amputation categories. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07415214
Volume :
74
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Vascular Surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151950513
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvs.2021.02.015