Introduction: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is associated with vaso-occlusive events (VOEs) that can lead to disease complications, including early mortality. Given that similar inflammatory responses characterize VOE and traumatic injury, injured patients with SCD may be vulnerable to acute complications. This study is the first to examine whether traumatic injury is associated with increased severity of future VOEs.
Methods: This cohort study was conducted using electronic health record data from an SCD clinic in Western Pennsylvania; 356 patients with SCD from January 2000 to July 2021 were identified via retrospective chart review. 55 patients were eligible based on continuous medical record data spanning 1 year preinjury and postinjury. Patients were sorted into three treatment groups based on injury management: (1) Neither triage to trauma team activation (TTA) nor inpatient admission (), (2) Triage but no inpatient admission (), and (3) . Outcomes included time from injury to first VOE, annual VOE counts requiring an emergency department (ED) visit, and ED length of stay (LOS) for the first VOE after injury.
Results: individuals experienced a VOE event within 2.93 days of injury, significantly shorter time to event than individuals at 52.375 days and individuals at 100.16 days (p=0.0058). No difference in annual VOE counts was noted postinjury across all groups. However, a significant increase in VOE LOS preinjury (16.1 hours) to postinjury (77.4 hours) was noted only for the group (p=0.038). Cox regression model showed that shortened time to VOE events was marginally associated with TTA status (p=0.06).
Conclusion: Despite minimal changes in long-term VOE outcomes after injury, traumatic injuries may accelerate the time-to-VOE among the group. Therefore, future research is warranted to analyze whether the absence of postinjury triage assessment and intervention may cause unforeseen physiologic stressors contributing to VOE outcomes.
Level Of Evidence: Level IV: retrospective case-control study with three negative criteria.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10668288 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/tsaco-2023-001200 | DOI Listing |
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