Hazard regression models of early mortality in trauma centers.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-1-2012

Institution/Department

Surgery

Journal Title

Journal of the American College of Surgeons

MeSH Headings

Aged, Female, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Injury Severity Score, Logistic Models, Male, Odds Ratio, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Trauma Centers, United States, Wounds and Injuries

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Factors affecting early hospital deaths after trauma can be different from factors affecting later hospital deaths, and the distribution of short and long prehospital times can vary among hospitals. Hazard regression (HR) models might therefore be more useful than logistic regression (LR) models for analysis of trauma mortality, especially when treatment effects at different time points are of interest.

STUDY DESIGN: We obtained data for trauma center patients from the 2008-2009 National Trauma Data Bank. Patients were included if they had complete data for prehospital times, hospital times, survival outcomes, age, vital signs, and severity scores. Patients were excluded if pulseless on admission, transferred in or out, or had an Injury Severity Score

RESULTS: A total of 85,327 patients in 161 hospitals met inclusion criteria. Crude hazards peaked initially and then declined steadily. When hazard ratios were assumed constant in HR models, they were similar to odds ratios in LR models associating increased mortality with increased age, firearm mechanism, increased severity, more deranged physiology, and estimated hospital-specific effects. However, when hospital effects were allowed to vary by time, HR models demonstrated that hospital outliers were not the same at different times after injury.

CONCLUSIONS: Hazard regression models with time-varying hazard ratios reveal inconsistencies in treatment effects, data quality, and/or timing of early death among trauma centers. Hazard regression models are generally more flexible than LR models, can be adapted for censored data, and potentially offer a better tool for analysis of factors affecting early death after injury.

ISSN

1879-1190

First Page

841

Last Page

849

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