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Time is domain: factors affecting primary fascial closure after trauma and non-trauma damage control laparotomy (data from the EAST SLEEP-TIME multicenter registry)

Authors :
Nicholas T. Duletzke
Haytham M.A. Kaafarani
Grace Chang
Zoltan H. Nemeth
Jade Nunez
Adam Gutierrez
Kaitlin McArthur
Joseph A. Posluszny
Heidi Kemmer
Cassandra Krause
Ahsan Butt
David Turay
Kyle Leneweaver
Eric J. Ley
Aimee LaRiccia
Meghan Cochran-Yu
Jeffrey Nahmias
Chloe Krasnoff
Kaushik Mukherjee
Simon Moradian
Lourdes Swentek
Nina E. Glass
Xian Luo-Owen
Sigrid Burruss
Leon Naar
Michele Fiorentino
Oscar D. Guillamondegui
Michelle Kincaid
Samantha Toscano
Jaroslaw W Bilaniuk
Isaac Hanson
James M. Bardes
Eugenia Kwon
Connie DeLa'O
Sarah R. Lombardo
Areg Grigorian
Salina Wydo
Mark Lieser
Source :
European journal of trauma and emergency surgery : official publication of the European Trauma Society. 48(3)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Damage control laparotomy (DCL) is used for both traumatic and non-traumatic indications. Failure to achieve primary fascial closure (PFC) in a timely fashion has been associated with complications including sepsis, fistula, and mortality. We sought to identify factors associated with time to PFC in a multicenter retrospective cohort.We reviewed retrospective data from 15 centers in the EAST SLEEP-TIME registry, including age, comorbidities (Charlson Comorbidity Index [CCI]), small and large bowel resection, bowel discontinuity, vascular procedures, retained packs, number of re-laparotomies, net fluid balance after 24 h, trauma, and time to first takeback in 12-h increments to identify key factors associated with time to PFC.In total, 368 patients (71.2% trauma, of which 50.6% were penetrating, median ISS 25 [16, 34], with median Apache II score 15 [11, 22] in non-trauma) were in the cohort. Of these, 92.9% of patients achieved PFC at 60.8 ± 72.0 h after 1.6 ± 1.2 re-laparotomies. Each additional re-laparotomy reduced the odds of PFC by 91.5% (95%CI 88.2-93.9%, p 0.001). Time to first re-laparotomy was highly significant (p 0.001) in terms of odds of achieving PFC, with no difference between 12 and 24 h to first re-laparotomy (ref), and decreases in odds of PFC of 78.4% (65.8-86.4%, p 0.001) for first re-laparotomy after 24.1-36 h, 90.8% (84.7-94.4%, p 0.001) for 36.1-48 h, and 98.1% (96.4-99.0%, p 0.001) for 48 h. Trauma patients had increased likelihood of PFC in two separate analyses (p = 0.022 and 0.002).Time to re-laparotomy ≤ 24 h and minimizing number of re-laparotomies are highly predictive of rapid achievement of PFC in patients after trauma- and non-trauma DCL.2B.

Details

ISSN :
18639941
Volume :
48
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European journal of trauma and emergency surgery : official publication of the European Trauma Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d05dd5be6422f890fb298d9018d95d09