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Journal Article

Citation

Davis AL, Wales PW, Malik T, Stephens D, Razik F, Schuh S. J. Pediatr. 2015; 167(3): 593-598.e1.

Affiliation

Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Research Institute, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Electronic address: Suzanne.schuh@sickkids.ca.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jpeds.2015.05.041

PMID

26118931

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To examine the association between in-hospital mortality and the BIG (composed of the base deficit [B], International normalized ratio [I], Glasgow Coma Scale [G]) score measured on arrival to the emergency department in pediatric blunt trauma patients, adjusted for pre-hospital intubation, volume administration, and presence of hypotension and head injury. We also examined the association between the BIG score and mortality in patients requiring admission to the intensive care unit (ICU). STUDY DESIGN: A retrospective 2001-2012 trauma database review of patients with blunt trauma ≤17 years old with an Injury Severity score ≥12. Charts were reviewed for in-hospital mortality, components of the BIG score upon arrival to the emergency department, prehospital intubation, crystalloids ≥20 mL/kg, presence of hypotension, head injury, and disposition.

RESULTS: 50/621 (8%) of the study patients died. Independent mortality predictors were the BIG score (OR 11, 95% CI 6-25), prior fluid bolus (OR 3, 95% CI 1.3-9), and prior intubation (OR 8, 95% CI 2-40). The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.95 (CI 0.93-0.98), with the optimal BIG cutoff of 16. With BIG <16, death rate was 3/496 (0.006, 95% CI 0.001-0.007) vs 47/125 (0.38, 95% CI 0.15-0.7) with BIG ≥16, (P < .0001). In patients requiring admission to the ICU, the BIG score remained predictive of mortality (OR 14.3, 95% CI 7.3-32, P < .0001).

CONCLUSIONS: The BIG score accurately predicts mortality in a population of North American pediatric patients with blunt trauma independent of pre-hospital interventions, presence of head injury, and hypotension, and identifies children with a high probability of survival (BIG <16). The BIG score is also associated with mortality in pediatric patients with trauma requiring admission to the ICU.


Language: en

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