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Is the timing of fixation associated with fracture-related infection among tibial plateau fracture patients with compartment syndrome? A multicenter retrospective cohort study of 729 patients

Authors :
Andrew G. Dubina
George Morcos
Nathan N. O'Hara
Givenchy W. Manzano
Heather A. Vallier
Hassan Farooq
Roman M. Natoli
Donald Adams
William T. Obremskey
Brandon G. Wilkinson
Matthew Hogue
Justin M. Haller
Lucas S. Marchand
Gavin Hautala
Paul E. Matuszewski
Guillermo R. Pechero
Joshua L. Gary
Christopher J. Doro
Paul S. Whiting
Michael J. Chen
Malcolm R. DeBaun
Michael J. Gardner
Alan W. Reynolds
Gregory T. Altman
Mitchel R. Obey
Anna N. Miller
Douglas Haase
Brent Wise
Austin Wallace
Jennifer Hagen
Jeffrey O'Donnell
Mark Gage
Nicholas R. Johnson
Madhav Karunakar
Joseph Dynako
John Morellato
Zachary A. Panton
I. Leah Gitajn
Lucas Haase
George Ochenjele
Erika Roddy
Saam Morshed
Abigail E. Sagona
Tyler D. Caton
Michael J. Weaver
Jerald R. Westberg
Jose San Miguel
Robert V. O'Toole
Source :
Injury. 53(11)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Tibial plateau fractures with an ipsilateral compartment syndrome are a clinical challenge with limited guidance regarding the best time to perform open reduction and internal fixation (ORIF) relative to fasciotomy wound closure. This study aimed to determine if the risk of fracture-related infection (FRI) differs based on the timing of tibial plateau ORIF relative to closure of ipsilateral fasciotomy wounds.A retrospective cohort study identified patients with tibial plateau fractures and an ipsilateral compartment syndrome treated with 4-compartment fasciotomy at 22 US trauma centers from 2009 to 2019. The primary outcome measure was FRI requiring operative debridement after ORIF. The ORIF timing relative to fasciotomy closure was categorized as ORIF before, at the same time as, or after fasciotomy closure. Bayesian hierarchical regression models with a neutral prior were used to determine the association between timing of ORIF and infection. The posterior probability of treatment benefit for ORIF was also determined for the three timings of ORIF relative to fasciotomy closure.Of the 729 patients who underwent ORIF of their tibial plateau fracture, 143 (19.6%) subsequently developed a FRI requiring operative treatment. Patients sustaining infections were: 21.0% of those with ORIF before (43 of 205), 15.9% at the same time as (37 of 232), and 21.6% after fasciotomy wound closure (63 of 292). ORIF at the same time as fasciotomy closure demonstrated a 91% probability of being superior to before closure (RR, 0.75; 95% CrI, 0.38 to 1.10). ORIF after fasciotomy closure had a lower likelihood (45%) of a superior outcome than before closure (RR, 1.02; 95% CrI; 0.64 to 1.39).Data from this multicenter cohort confirms previous reports of a high FRI risk in patients with a tibial plateau fracture and ipsilateral compartment syndrome. Our results suggest that ORIF at the time of fasciotomy closure has the highest probability of treatment benefit, but that infection was common with all three timings of ORIF in this difficult clinical situation.

Details

ISSN :
18790267
Volume :
53
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Injury
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89e2cb4356691ef5cce59f5720e1f4bd