• Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg · Apr 2019

    Multicenter Study

    A seven-center examination of the relationship between monthly volume and mortality in trauma: a hypothesis-generating study.

    • Stanislaw P Stawicki, Keith Habeeb, Niels D Martin, M Shay O'Mara, James Cipolla, David C Evans, Creagh Boulger, Babak Sarani, Charles H Cook, Alok Gupta, William S Hoff, Peter G Thomas, Jeffrey M Jordan, Weidun Alan Guo, and Mark J Seamon.
    • Level I Regional Trauma Center, St. Luke's University Health Network, Bethlehem, PA, USA. stanislaw.stawicki@sluhn.org.
    • Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg. 2019 Apr 1; 45 (2): 281-288.

    IntroductionThe relationship between trauma volumes and patient outcomes continues to be controversial, with limited data available regarding the effect of month-to-month trauma volume variability on clinical results. This study examines the relationship between monthly trauma volume variations and patient mortality at seven Level I Trauma Centers located in the Eastern United States. We hypothesized that higher monthly trauma volumes may be associated with lower corresponding mortality.MethodsMonthly patient volume data were collected from seven Level I Trauma Centers. Additional information retrieved included monthly mortality, demographics, mean monthly injury severity (ISS), and trauma mechanism (blunt versus penetrating). Mortality was utilized as the primary study outcome. Statistical corrections for mean age, gender distribution, ISS, and mechanism of injury were made using analysis of co-variance (ANCOVA). Center-specific, annually-adjusted median monthly volumes (CSAA-MMV) were calculated to standardize patient volume differences across participating institutions. Statistical significance was set at α < 0.05.ResultsA total of 604 months of trauma admissions, encompassing 122,197 patients, were analyzed. Controlling for patient age, gender, ISS, and mechanism of injury, aggregate data suggested that monthly trauma volumes < 100 were associated with significantly greater mortality (3.9%) than months with volumes > 400 (mortality 2.9%, p < 0.01). To account for differences in monthly volumes between centers, as well as for temporal bias associated with potential differences over the entire study duration period, data were normalized using CSAA-MMV as a standardized reference point. Monthly volumes ≤ 33% of the CSAA-MMV were associated with adjusted mortality of 5.0% whereas monthly volumes ≥ 134% CSAA-MMV were associated with adjusted mortality of 2.7% (p < 0.01).ConclusionsThis hypothesis-generating study suggests that greater monthly trauma volumes appear to be associated with lower mortality. In addition, our data also suggest that across all participating centers mortality may be a function of relative month-to-month volume variation. When normalized to institution-specific, annually-adjusted "median" monthly trauma contacts, we show that months with patient volumes ≤ 33% median may be associated with subtly but not negligibly (1.4-2.3%) higher mortality than months with patient volumes ≥ 134% median.

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