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Journal Article

Citation

Huang YZ, Lu GZ, Zhao HS, Liu LJ, Jin J, Wu YF, Wu J, Zhao FL, Liu N, Liu WM, Liu L, Zhu TJ, Chen EZ, Gu Q, Ye HW, Xi XM, Du B, Yi Y, Qiu HB. Ann. Transl. Med. 2020; 8(17): e1053.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, AME Publishing)

DOI

10.21037/atm-20-288

PMID

33145272 PMCID

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aim of the study was to identify the clinical features and the factors associated with burn induced mortality among young adults after exposure to indoor explosion and fire.

Methods: This is an observational study which included burn patients who were admitted to eighteen ICUs after a fire disaster. Epidemiologic and clinical characteristics, as well as therapy were recorded. The primary outcome was 90-day mortality. The mortality-related factors were also analyzed.

Results: There were 167 burn patients enrolled in the study, the median age was 38 years, 62 (37.1%) patients died within 90 days. Seventy-one percent of patients had a burn size ≥90% TBSA, and 73.7% of patients had a full-thickness burn area above 50% TBSA. The survivors had lower Baux scores, and received earlier escharectomy and autologous skin grafts. The 50% mortality rates (LA50s) for burn size and full-thickness burn area were 95.8% and 88.6% TBSA, respectively. The multivariate analysis showed that full-thickness burn area over 50% TBSA and residual burned surface area (RBSA)/TBSA at 28 days were strong predictors of mortality among burn patients (odds ratio 2.55; 95% CI, 1.01 to 6.44, P=0.047; odds ratio 1.07; 95% CI, 1.04 to 1.09, P<0.001). The ROC curve-based cut-off values of RBSA/TBSA at 28 days for predicting 90-day mortality were 62.5%.

Conclusions: Burn size and full-thickness burn area were the main risk factors for poor outcome in patients with extensive burns. Earlier escharectomy and autologous skin grafts may improve outcomes.


Language: en

Keywords

mortality; autologous skin grafts; escharectomy; Extensive burns; residual burned surface area

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