Prospective derivation of a clinical decision rule for thoracolumbar spine evaluation after blunt trauma: An American Association for the Surgery of Trauma Multi-Institutional Trials Group Study.

J Trauma Acute Care Surg

From the Division of Trauma and Surgical Critical Care, University of Southern California (K.I., L.N., D.S.) Los Angeles; Department of Surgery, Loma Linda University (D.T.), Loma Linda; Division of Trauma, Surgical Critical Care and Burns, Department of Surgery, University of California San Diego (L.K.), La Jolla; and Trauma Service, Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital (S.K.), Santa Barbara, California; Department of Surgery, R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center (J.M.), University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; Division of Trauma, Burns and Surgical Critical Care, University of Alabama at Birmingham (P.B.), Birmingham, Alabama; Department of Trauma, East Texas Medical Center (L.W.), Tyler; and Department of Surgery, University of Texas Southwestern-Austin (J.C.), Austin, Texas; Department of Surgery, Crozer-Chester Medical Center (R.C.), Upland; and Division of Acute Care Surgery, Thomas Jefferson University (A.B.), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Division of Trauma, Massachusetts General Hospital (M.D.), Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; Broward General Medical Center (M.B.), Florida International University, Miami, Florida; and Division of Trauma and Surgical Critical Care, Lutheran Medical Center (M.G.), Brooklyn, New York.

Published: March 2015

Background: Unlike the cervical spine (C-spine), where National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study (NEXUS) and the Canadian C-spine Rules can be used, evidence-based thoracolumbar spine (TL-spine) clearance guidelines do not exist. The aim of this study was to develop a clinical decision rule for evaluating the TL-spine after injury.

Methods: Adult (≥15 years) blunt trauma patients were prospectively enrolled at 13 US trauma centers (January 2012 to January 2014). Exclusion criteria included the following: C-spine injury with neurologic deficit, preexisting paraplegia/tetraplegia, and unevaluable examination. Remaining evaluable patients underwent TL-spine imaging and were followed up to discharge. The primary end point was a clinically significant TL-spine injury requiring TL-spine orthoses or surgical stabilization. Regression techniques were used to develop a clinical decision rule. Decision rule performance in identifying clinically significant fractures was tested.

Results: Of 12,479 patients screened, 3,065 (24.6%) met inclusion criteria (mean [SD] age, 43.5 [19.8] years [range, 15-103 years]; male sex, 66.3%; mean [SD] Injury Severity Score [ISS], 8.8 [7.5]). The majority underwent computed tomography (93.3%), 6.3% only plain films, and 0.2% magnetic resonance imaging exclusively. TL-spine injury was identified in 499 patients (16.3%), of which 264 (8.6%) were clinically significant (29.2% surgery, 70.8% TL-spine orthosis). The majority was AO Type A1 282 (56.5%), followed by 67 (13.4%) A3, 43 (8.6%) B2, and 32 (6.4%) A4 injuries. The predictive ability of clinical examination (pain, midline tenderness, deformity, neurologic deficit), age, and mechanism was examined; positive clinical examination finding resulted in a sensitivity of 78.4% and a specificity of 72.9%. Addition of age of 60 years or older and high-risk mechanism (fall, crush, motor vehicle crash with ejection/rollover, unenclosed vehicle crash, auto vs. pedestrian) increased sensitivity to 98.9% with specificity of 29.0% for clinically significant injuries and 100.0% sensitivity and 27.3% specificity for injuries requiring surgery.

Conclusion: Clinical examination alone is insufficient for determining the need for imaging in evaluable patients at risk of TL-spine injury. Addition of age and high-risk mechanism results in a clinical decision-making rule with a sensitivity of 98.9% for clinically significant injuries.

Level Of Evidence: Diagnostic test, level III.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/TA.0000000000000560DOI Listing

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