Back to Search Start Over

Building a Clinical Research Network in Trauma Orthopaedics: The Major Extremity Trauma Research Consortium (METRC)

Authors :
Andrew R. Burgess
Lisa K. Cannada
Wade T. Gordon
Michael J. Bosse
Reza Firoozabadi
Janet Wells
H. Claude Sagi
Kathy Carl
Paul M. Lafferty
Michael T. Mazurek
Rachel B. Seymour
Jerald R. Westberg
Jason W. Nascone
Todd O. McKinley
Brian O. Westerlind
Cesar S. Molina
Theodore T. Manson
Christopher S. Smith
Gregory A. Zych
Hope Carlisle
Daniel O. Scharfstein
Medardo R. Maroto
Hassan R. Mir
Paul Tornetta
Gregory de Lissovoy
George V Russell
Daniel J. Stinner
Kevin M Kuhn
Clifford B. Jones
J. Tracy Watson
Mary Zadnik-Newell
James A. Keeney
John J. Keeling
Dana J. Farrell
Corey Henderson
Greg E. Gaski
Bruce J. Sangeorzan
Patrick M. Osborn
Robert V O'Toole
Matthew D. Karam
Martha B. Holden
Andrew N. Pollak
Marcus F. Sciadini
Tigist Belaye
J. Spence Reid
Andrew H. Schmidt
Dennis W. Mann
David Teague
James R. Ficke
Heather Silva
Lauren E. Allen
Brendan M. Patterson
Robert D. Teasdall
Theodore Miclau
Madhav A. Karunakar
Hannah Gissel
Lori Smith
Alysse J Boyd
J. Brett Goodman
Joshua R. Langford
Patrick F. Bergin
James Toledano
Andrew R. Evans
Renan C. Castillo
Eben A. Carroll
Ellen J. MacKenzie
Xochitl Ceniceros
Joshua L. Gary
Paula Harriott
J. Lawrence Marsh
Dinorah Rodriguez
Saam Morshed
Henry A. Boateng
Joseph R. Hsu
Christine Churchill
David J. Hak
Anthony R. Carlini
Roman A. Hayda
Terrence J. Endres
Daniel S. Chan
Rachel Holthaus
Sarah B. Langensiepen
Debra L. Sietsema
James J. Hutson
Pamela M. Warlow
Barbara Steverson
Lisa Reider
Kristin R. Archer
Stephen H. Sims
Katherine Frey
Amy Nelson
Kathy Franco
Roy Sanders
Daniel V. Unger
Heather A. Vallier
William T. Obremskey
Joseph C. Wenke
Source :
Journal of orthopaedic trauma. 30(7)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Lessons learned from battle have been fundamental to advancing the care of injuries that occur in civilian life. Equally important is the need to further refine these advances in civilian practice, so they are available during future conflicts. The Major Extremity Trauma Research Consortium (METRC) was established to address these needs.METRC is a network of 22 core level I civilian trauma centers and 4 core military treatment centers-with the ability to expand patient recruitment to more than 30 additional satellite trauma centers for the purpose of conducting multicenter research studies relevant to the treatment and outcomes of orthopaedic trauma sustained in the military. Early measures of success of the Consortium pertain to building of an infrastructure to support the network, managing the regulatory process, and enrolling and following patients in multiple studies.METRC has been successful in maintaining the engagement of several leading, high volume, level I trauma centers that form the core of METRC; together they operatively manage 15,432 major fractures annually. METRC is currently funded to conduct 18 prospective studies that address 6 priority areas. The design and implementation of these studies are managed through a single coordinating center. As of December 1, 2015, a total of 4560 participants have been enrolled.Success of METRC to date confirms the potential for civilian and military trauma centers to collaborate on critical research issues and leverage the strength that comes from engaging patients and providers from across multiple centers.

Details

ISSN :
15312291
Volume :
30
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of orthopaedic trauma
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....57fa9fe0eba8f6065ae61b195c9cc348