Back to Search Start Over

Follow-up strategies for patients with splenic trauma managed non-operatively: the 2022 World Society of Emergency Surgery consensus document

Authors :
Mauro Podda
Belinda De Simone
Marco Ceresoli
Francesco Virdis
Francesco Favi
Johannes Wiik Larsen
Federico Coccolini
Massimo Sartelli
Nikolaos Pararas
Solomon Gurmu Beka
Luigi Bonavina
Raffaele Bova
Adolfo Pisanu
Fikri Abu-Zidan
Zsolt Balogh
Osvaldo Chiara
Imtiaz Wani
Philip Stahel
Salomone Di Saverio
Thomas Scalea
Kjetil Soreide
Boris Sakakushev
Francesco Amico
Costanza Martino
Andreas Hecker
Nicola de’Angelis
Mircea Chirica
Joseph Galante
Andrew Kirkpatrick
Emmanouil Pikoulis
Yoram Kluger
Denis Bensard
Luca Ansaloni
Gustavo Fraga
Ian Civil
Giovanni Domenico Tebala
Isidoro Di Carlo
Yunfeng Cui
Raul Coimbra
Vanni Agnoletti
Ibrahima Sall
Edward Tan
Edoardo Picetti
Andrey Litvin
Dimitrios Damaskos
Kenji Inaba
Jeffrey Leung
Ronald Maier
Walt Biffl
Ari Leppaniemi
Ernest Moore
Kurinchi Gurusamy
Fausto Catena
Source :
World Journal of Emergency Surgery, Vol 17, Iss 1, Pp 1-37 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMC, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Background In 2017, the World Society of Emergency Surgery published its guidelines for the management of adult and pediatric patients with splenic trauma. Several issues regarding the follow-up of patients with splenic injuries treated with NOM remained unsolved. Methods Using a modified Delphi method, we sought to explore ongoing areas of controversy in the NOM of splenic trauma and reach a consensus among a group of 48 international experts from five continents (Africa, Europe, Asia, Oceania, America) concerning optimal follow-up strategies in patients with splenic injuries treated with NOM. Results Consensus was reached on eleven clinical research questions and 28 recommendations with an agreement rate ≥ 80%. Mobilization after 24 h in low-grade splenic trauma patients (WSES Class I, AAST Grades I–II) was suggested, while in patients with high-grade splenic injuries (WSES Classes II–III, AAST Grades III–V), if no other contraindications to early mobilization exist, safe mobilization of the patient when three successive hemoglobins 8 h apart after the first are within 10% of each other was considered safe according to the panel. The panel suggests adult patients to be admitted to hospital for 1 day (for low-grade splenic injuries—WSES Class I, AAST Grades I–II) to 3 days (for high-grade splenic injuries—WSES Classes II–III, AAST Grades III–V), with those with high-grade injuries requiring admission to a monitored setting. In the absence of specific complications, the panel suggests DVT and VTE prophylaxis with LMWH to be started within 48–72 h from hospital admission. The panel suggests splenic artery embolization (SAE) as the first-line intervention in patients with hemodynamic stability and arterial blush on CT scan, irrespective of injury grade. Regarding patients with WSES Class II blunt splenic injuries (AAST Grade III) without contrast extravasation, a low threshold for SAE has been suggested in the presence of risk factors for NOM failure. The panel also suggested angiography and eventual SAE in all hemodynamically stable adult patients with WSES Class III injuries (AAST Grades IV–V), even in the absence of CT blush, especially when concomitant surgery that requires change of position is needed. Follow-up imaging with contrast-enhanced ultrasound/CT scan in 48–72 h post-admission of trauma in splenic injuries WSES Class II (AAST Grade III) or higher treated with NOM was considered the best strategy for timely detection of vascular complications. Conclusion This consensus document could help guide future prospective studies aiming at validating the suggested strategies through the implementation of prospective trauma databases and the subsequent production of internationally endorsed guidelines on the issue.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17497922
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
World Journal of Emergency Surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8ddb0c68d0a443b998d7b6950c233cb1
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13017-022-00457-5