Prospective study of short-term quality-of-life after traumatic rib fractures.

J Trauma Acute Care Surg

From the Division of General Surgery (J.C., G.C., J.D.J., D.A.S.), Department of Surgery, Department of Epidemiology and Population Health (J.C.), Surgeons Writing About Trauma (S.K., N.A.H., G.C., R.S., J.D.J., D.A.S.), and School of Medicine (S.K., R.S.), Stanford University, Stanford, California.

Published: January 2021

Background: Postdischarge convalescence after traumatic rib fractures remains unclear. We hypothesized that patients with rib fractures, even as an isolated injury, have associated poor quality of life (QoL) after discharge.

Methods: We prospectively enrolled adult patients at our level I trauma center with rib fractures between July 2019 and January 2020. We assessed QoL at 1 and 3 months after discharge using the Trauma-specific Quality-of-Life (T-QoL; 43-question survey evaluating five QoL domains on a 4-point Likert scale, where 4 indicates optimal and 1, worst QoL) and supplementary questionnaires. We used generalized estimating equations to assess T-QoL score trends over time and effect of age, sex, injury pattern, self-perceived injury severity, and Injury Severity Score.

Results: We enrolled 139 patients (108 completed the first and 93 completed both surveys). Three months after discharge, 33% of patients were not working at preinjury capacity, and 7% were still using opioid analgesia. Suffering rib fractures mostly impacted recovery and resilience (T-QoL score, mean [robust standard error] at 1 month, 2.7 [0.1]; 3 months, 3.0[0.1]) and physical well-being domains (1 month, 2.5 [0.1]; 3 months, 2.9[0.1]). Quality of life improved over time across all domains. Compared with patients who perceived their injuries as mild/moderate, patients who perceived their injuries as severe/very severe reported worse T-QoL scores across all domains. In contrast, Injury Severity Score did not affect QoL. Patients 65 years or older (-0.6 [0.1]) and women (-0.6 [0.2]) reported worse functional engagement compared with those 65 years or older and men, respectively.

Conclusion: We found that patients with traumatic rib fractures experience suboptimal QoL after discharge. Quality of life improved over time, but even 3 months after discharge, patients reported challenges performing activities of daily living, slower-than-expected recovery, and not returning to work at preinjury capacity. Perception of injury severity had a large effect on QoL. Patients with rib fractures may benefit from close short-term follow-up.

Level Of Evidence: Prognostic and epidemiological, level III.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/TA.0000000000002917DOI Listing

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