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Factors influencing management of bilateral femur fractures: A multicenter retrospective cohort of early versus delayed definitive Fixation

Authors :
Jason Nadeau
Melissa Albersheim
Joseph T. Labrum
Reuben C. Lufrano
Robert V. O’Toole
Harsh R. Parikh
Danielle Ries de Chaffin
Patrick Davis
Ilexa R. Flagstad
Daniel Connelly
Hassan R. Mir
Barbara Steverson
Tegan Schmidt
Natasha M Simske
Shawn Feinstein
Arthur J. Only
David J. Hak
Lauren M. Tatman
Brian P. Cunningham
Paul S. Whiting
Jerald R. Westberg
Claude Sagi
Julie Titter
Andres Rodriguez-Buitrago
Jared Atchison
Erik A. Lund
Nichole Shaw
Andrew H. Schmidt
Alexander B. Siy
Heather A. Vallier
Emily Wagstrom
Austin Heare
Mary A. Breslin
Jesse C. Hahn
Cyril Mauffrey
William T. Obremskey
Sandy Vang
Source :
Injury. 52:2395-2402
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

The purpose of our study was to evaluate the factors that influence the timing of definitive fixation in the management of bilateral femoral shaft fractures and the outcomes for patients with these injuries.Patients with bilateral femur fractures treated between 1998 to 2019 at ten level-1 trauma centers were retrospectively reviewed. Patients were grouped into early or delayed fixation, which was defined as definitive fixation of both femurs within or greater than 24 hours from injury, respectively. Statistical analysis included reversed logistic odds regression to predict which variable(s) was most likely to determine timing to definitive fixation. The outcomes included age, sex, high-volume institution, ISS, GCS, admission lactate, and admission base deficit.Three hundred twenty-eight patients were included; 164 patients were included in the early fixation group and 164 patients in the delayed fixation group. Patients managed with delayed fixation had a higher Injury Severity Score (26.8 vs 22.4; p0.01), higher admission lactate (4.4 and 3.0; p0.01), and a lower Glasgow Coma Scale (10.7 vs 13; p0.01). High-volume institution was the most reliable influencer for time to definitive fixation, successfully determining 78.6% of patients, followed by admission lactate, 64.4%. When all variables were evaluated in conjunction, high-volume institution remained the strongest contributor (XIn this study, high-volume institution was the strongest predictor of timing to definitive fixation in patients with bilateral femur fractures. This study demonstrates an opportunity to create a standardized care pathway for patients with these injuries.Level III.

Details

ISSN :
00201383
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Injury
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a4fcb68edfe631806b2f4774bd742612
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.injury.2021.02.091