- Research
- Open access
- Published:
Trauma complications and in-hospital mortality: failure-to-rescue
Critical Care volume 24, Article number: 223 (2020)
Abstract
Background
Reducing medical errors and minimizing complications have become the focus of quality improvement in medicine. Failure-to-rescue (FTR) is defined as death after a surgical complication, which is an institution-level surgical safety and quality metric that is an important variable affecting mortality rates in hospitals. This study aims to examine whether complication and FTR are different across low- and high-mortality hospitals for trauma care.
Methods
This was a retrospective cohort study performed at trauma care hospitals registered at Japan Trauma Data Bank (JTDB) from 2004 to 2017. Trauma patients aged ≥ 15 years with injury severity score (ISS) of ≥ 3 and those who survived for > 48 h after hospital admission were included. The hospitals in JTDB were categorized into three groups by standardized mortality rate. We compared trauma complications, FTR, and in-hospital mortality by a standardized mortality rate (divided by the institute-level quartile).
Results
Among 184,214 patients that were enrolled, the rate of any complication was 12.7%. The overall mortality rate was 3.7%, and the mortality rate among trauma patients without complications was only 2.8% (non-precedented deaths). However, the mortality rate among trauma patients with any complications was 10.2% (FTR). Hospitals were categorized into high- (40 facilities with 44,773 patients), average- (72 facilities with 102,368 patients), and low- (39 facilities with 37,073 patients) mortality hospitals, using the hospital ranking of a standardized mortality rate. High-mortality hospitals showed lower ISS than low-mortality hospitals [10 (IQR, 9–18) vs. 11 (IQR, 9–20), P < 0.01]. Patients in high-mortality hospitals showed more complications (14.2% vs. 11.2%, P < 0.01), in-hospital mortality (5.1% vs. 2.5%, P < 0.01), FTR (13.6% vs. 7.4%, P < 0.01), and non-precedented deaths (3.6% vs. 1.9%, P < 0.01) than those in low-mortality hospitals.
Conclusions
Unlike reports of elective surgery, complication rates and FTR are associated with in-hospital mortality rates at the center level in trauma care.
Key points
-
In this retrospective cohort study, patients in low-performance hospitals showed more complications, in-hospital mortality, FTR, and non-precedented deaths than those in high-performance hospitals, unlike reports of elective surgery.
-
A lower risk of complications and better care of those with complications could play crucial roles in trauma care.
Background
Reducing medical errors and minimizing complications have become the focus of quality improvement in the medical field [1]. Failure-to-rescue (FTR) is defined as death after a surgical complication [2]. Regarding elective surgery, a study showed that at the hospital level, complications and mortality were not correlated, but FTR and mortality were correlated [3]. Therefore, the focus should not be on improvising operative techniques to prevent complications but on more efficient rescuing from the complications. Thus, FTR is an institution-level surgical safety and quality metric [4] and is considered an important variable affecting mortality rates in hospitals [5]; this metric indicates the ability of a hospital to identify and successfully manage complications [6].
Recently also in a case of trauma, FTR was found to be an important variable [7] because it is more about an institution’s ability to rescue those who develop complications [8,9,10]. Nevertheless, whether FTR in trauma care contributes to variations in mortality across centers [7] remains debatable, as there are some concerns regarding the use of FTR as a quality measure of trauma care [11]. First, severe trauma patients die in the hours immediately after injury, although all patients after elective surgery ideally survive. Outcomes after trauma complications may be less modifiable. FTR might play a relatively minor role in trauma patients compared with those after elective surgery. Moreover, with rapid progress in endovascular interventions and intensive care, surgeries for trauma have reduced. Conceivably, complications and FTR should be important in trauma patients regardless of FTR playing a minor or major role. Therefore, our aim was to investigate the association between a complication rate and FTR and a hospital performance level of trauma care in hospitals.
Methods
Design and setting
This was a retrospective cohort study using the Japan Trauma Data Bank (JTDB), which is a nationwide trauma registry established in 2003 by the Japanese Association for the Surgery of Trauma and by the Japanese Association for Acute Medicine with the aim of improving and ensuring the quality of trauma care in Japan, and compiled by the JTDB investigators [12]. A total of 264 hospitals, including 95% of the tertiary emergency medical centers in Japan, participated in the JTDB in 2017.
Participants
Patients aged ≥ 15 years with an injury severity score (ISS) of ≥ 3 and diagnosed with trauma between 2004 and 2017 were enrolled in this study. Only patients who survived for > 48 h after hospital admission were included to exclude the impact of early deaths. Patients with pre-hospital or emergency department (ED) death, un-survivable [abbreviated injury scale (AIS) score of 6], burns, or unknown trauma mechanisms, missing data of in-hospital death, and hospital for > 2 years were excluded. Similar to a previous report [7], the current analysis was limited to hospitals contributing at least 200 patients to the cohort during the entire study period.
Data collection
Data related to patient and hospital information in the JTDB include patient demographics, AIS, ISS, pre-hospital and in-hospital procedures, and clinical outcomes. Data collection was performed as part of the routine clinical patient management.
Data definitions
The definition of complication was in accordance with the JTDB (Table 1), wherein FTR was defined as in-hospital mortality after at least one trauma complication. Non-precedented death was defined as patient death without any complications. Many trauma patients did not undergo surgical interventions, but FTR was considered in this study regardless of whether they underwent surgery, similar to a previous study [13]. Figure 1 shows the conceptualization of the study. The hospitals were separated into three groups by standardized mortality rate (hospital ranking).
Analysis
To investigate the association between a hospital ranking (hospital performance level of trauma care) and trauma complications, FTR, and in-hospital mortality, the hospitals were ranked low, average, or high by standardized mortality rates. First, we performed a logistic regression model to predict the probability of deaths [Pp(E)] after adjusting for baseline patient and trauma characteristics, which included patient’s age, sex, mechanism of injury, ISS, and vital signs at ED (Glasgow Coma Scale, systolic blood pressure, and heart rate). These variables were chosen based on clinical relevance and a previous study [7]. Next, the predicted probability of death for each patient at each hospital was summed to obtain a predicted mortality rate for each hospital [Pc(E)]. In addition, we also calculated an observed in-hospital mortality rate [Pc(O)] at each hospital. To yield a standardized mortality rate at each hospital, the overall mortality rate was multiplied by observed to expected [Pc(O)/Pc(E)] mortality ratio. Finally, hospitals were divided into three by the quartile of standardized mortality rate.
We compared the baseline characteristics, treatments, complications, and outcomes by the hospital ranking. Categorical variables were expressed as counts and percentages with comparisons performed using the chi-square test. Continuous variables were expressed as medians and interquartile ranges (IQRs) using the Kruskal–Wallis test because our study variables were not normally distributed.
We calculated the correlation coefficient between complication rate and FTR and in-hospital mortality and showed the correlation using bubble plots in all hospitals. As a sensitivity analysis, this correlation was analyzed based on the data from hospitals contributing at least 20 patients with complications in the cohort to avoid reporting bias.
All P values were two-sided, and P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. We performed statistical analyses using the Stata software, version 15.1 (StataCorp, TX, USA). Bubble plots were drawn using JMP version 14.0 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC).
Results
Of 294, 274 patients in the JTDB, there were 276, 502 adults (≥ 15 years) with trauma. Among these, 188, 347 met the inclusion and exclusion criteria, and after excluding patients in hospitals that contributed less than 200 patients to the JTDB, 184, 214 patients were analyzed in this study (Fig. 2).
The prevalence of any complication was 12.7%. The most frequent complications were pneumonia (3.2%), higher brain dysfunction (2.0%), urinary tract infection (1.5%), and atelectasis (1.2%). The overall mortality rate was 3.7%, and the mortality rate among trauma patients without complications was only 2.8% (non-precedented deaths). However, the mortality rate among trauma patients with any complications was 10.2% (FTR). Hospitals were categorized into high- (40 facilities with 44,773 patients), average- (72 facilities with 102,368 patients), and low- (39 facilities with 37,073 patients) mortality hospitals, using the hospital ranking (hospital performance).
Demographics and characteristics of trauma patients according to the hospital ranking (hospital performance) are shown in Table 2. High-mortality hospitals showed lower ISS than low-mortality hospitals [10 (IQR, 9–18) vs. 11 (IQR, 9–20), P < 0.01]. Treatments and interventions in trauma patients according to the hospital ranking (hospital performance) are shown in Table 3. Though patients in high-mortality hospitals received more emergency procedures in EDs than those in low-mortality hospitals (35.8% vs. 27.0%, P < 0.01), the former received fewer primary (50.4% vs. 54.7%, P < 0.01) and secondary surgeries (2.1% vs. 2.9%, P < 0.01) than the latter. Further, patients in high-mortality hospitals had more complications than those in low-mortality hospitals (14.2% vs. 11.2%, P < 0.01, Table 1).
Individual complications did not show a consistent pattern across the hospital ranking (hospital performance). Clinically, pneumonia, disseminated intravascular coagulation, coagulation disorder, and thrombocytopenia occurred more often in high-mortality hospitals than in low-mortality hospitals. An examination of outcomes according to the hospital ranking (hospital performance) (Table 4) revealed that high-mortality hospitals had significantly lower expected mortality than low-mortality hospitals did (3.7 ± 8.0% vs. 3.9 ± 8.5%, P < 0.01). However, in-hospital mortality (5.1% vs. 2.5%, P < 0.01), FTR (13.6% vs. 7.4%, P < 0.01), and non-precedented deaths (3.6% vs. 1.9%, P < 0.01) were higher in high-mortality hospitals than in low-mortality hospitals (Fig. 3).
The correlation coefficient (r2) between complication rate and in-hospital mortality was 0.2728 (P < 0.01) for hospitals contributing at least 20 patients with complications to the cohort complications (n = 128) and 0.2727 (P < 0.01) in all hospitals (n = 151). Figure 4 shows the correlation bubble plot. The correlation coefficient (r2) between FTR and in-hospital mortality was 0.2766 (P < 0.01) for hospitals contributing at least 20 patients with complications to the cohort complications (n = 128) and 0.0716 (P = 0.39) in all hospitals (n = 148). Figure 5 shows the correlation bubble plot.
Discussion
Our study indicated that complication rates and FTR were associated to in-hospital mortality rates at the center level, as previously reported [7]. Better patient care in high-performing trauma hospitals could be related to a lower risk of complications and rescue from a complication.
In-hospital mortality among trauma patients with complications (FTR) was almost two times more in high-mortality hospitals compared to low-mortality hospitals, similar to a previous study [7]. Our findings are also in line with another study [1], which was higher in high-mortality hospitals compared with low-mortality hospitals. However, previous studies [1, 7] showed discordant results regarding the complication rates. A study showed both lower complication rate and lower FTR related to patient’s better outcomes [7], but another study showed lower FTR related to patient’s better outcomes despite the similarity in complication rates in each hospital [1]; this was consistent with a previous report on elective surgery [3]. Our study supported the former [7]. Successful rescue of patients with complications after trauma would have led to lower mortality rates in high-performance hospitals. To improve the quality of trauma care, it is important not only to survive the trauma but also to avoid complications, and to be rescued from complications as well. Therefore, FTR is a reasonable measure of hospital quality that is strongly related to mortality.
A previous report on elective surgery concluded that complications and mortality are not correlated at the hospital level [3]. They argued that the focus should not be on improved operative techniques to prevent complications but on more efficient rescuing from the complications. In fact, neither our data nor the report by Haas et al. [7] replicates Ghaferi’s results [3]. Trauma complication studies, including our study, recruited not only patients who underwent surgery, but also patients who underwent nonoperative management. Nonoperative management for trauma care has been increasingly mainstream every year. Most of trauma surgeries are also emergency cases. Moreover, complications of trauma are not the same as those with elective surgeries. Therefore, the management of inpatients after trauma such as pneumonia is important, even if they did not undergo surgery.
Treatments and interventions differed with hospital performance. High-mortality hospitals had more emergency procedures but fewer surgeries. Though interventions may be related to the occurrence of a complication, there have been no studies investigating this relationship. Unfortunately, we did not have data on the adequacy of any procedure. There were various complications after trauma in our study, with infections and coagulopathy being the most common, but these complications did not show clinical difference according to hospital performance of trauma care. Indeed, specific complications included in studies have varied over time [14]. Though we captured trivial complications compared to other previous FTR [14], selection of complications was similar to other FTR studies in trauma patients [11]. It is plausible that not only major complications, but also trivial complications, may be related to worse outcomes.
The findings from the current and previous studies [1, 7, 15] add to the list of growing evidence showing that management of complications is central to health outcomes. A retrospective observational study on non-trauma patients showed that low FTR hospitals had significantly more staffing resources than high FTR hospitals [4]. One study showed surgical intensivists benefited trauma patients [16]. Taken together, these findings highlight the importance of closed intensive care unit staffing (nursing, staffing, education, work environment), a higher proportion of board-certified intensivists, and inpatient support in terms of hospitalists, residents including those with teaching status, overnight care, and dedicated rapid response team in trauma practice. Though staffing and management data were not available for extraction in JTDB, these variables may have been related to reduction trauma surgery with a corresponding increase in endovascular treatment and intensive care. Others have reported that sophisticated technology and larger volumes of hospital and surgeons were modifiable hospital factors that improved FTR, although patient’s factors were also related to FTR [14]. A team-based multidisciplinary approach could play an important role in trauma care by reducing judgment errors, delays in diagnosis of trauma, and crucial complications due to errors [17].
Limitations
This study is not without limitations. First, the complications lacked data on the date of occurrence and the context of each complication was unknown. However, we assessed the timing of the complications based on the type and nature of complications. Some complications like internal diseases might have caused the trauma. Second, complications may have been under-reported leading to underestimation or misclassification. Considering the difference in the correlation coefficient in all hospitals and specifically those that contributed to the study, it is plausible for some hospitals to have misdiagnosed or misregistered complications to JTDB. This was corroborated by the authors of a previous study who reported on the inadequate registration of complications [7]. However, another study found no meaningful differences between a registry and a chart review [18]. Thus, fair and accurate reporting of complications is essential for estimating hospital performance. Third, the impact of small hospitals is not known because we excluded hospitals that contributed little to JTDB. Fourth, we did not extract data related to treatments after complications. Fifth, we did not have the data on the type of care provided in different hospitals. We could not specify the type of care administered (unit, team, hospital characteristics, etc.) and as such could not help addressing the much needed better understanding of what made one hospital really better than another. In addition, we could not show which factors lead to better outcomes. Therefore, it might be difficult to identify what we could change at their own institution to improve outcomes. However, we know the importance of prevention of and rescue from complications.
Conclusions
Thus, complication rates and FTR are associated with in-hospital mortality rates at the center level, unlike reports of elective surgery. Better patient care in high-performing trauma hospitals could be related to a lower risk of complications and rescue from a complication.
Availability of data and materials
The datasets analyzed during the current study is available with the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Abbreviations
- FTR:
-
Failure-to-rescue
- ISS:
-
Injury severity score
- JTDB:
-
Japan Trauma Data Bank
- ED:
-
Emergency department
- AIS:
-
Abbreviated injury scale
- IQRs:
-
Interquartile ranges
References
Glance LG, Dick AW, Meredith JW, Mukamel DB. Variation in hospital complication rates and failure-to-rescue for trauma patients. Ann Surg. 2011;253(4):811–6.
Silber JH, Williams SV, Krakauer H, Schwartz JS. Hospital and patient characteristics associated with death after surgery. A study of adverse occurrence and failure to rescue. Med Care. 1992;30(7):615–29.
Ghaferi AA, Birkmeyer JD, Dimick JB. Variation in hospital mortality associated with inpatient surgery. N Engl J Med. 2009;361(14):1368–75.
Ward ST, Dimick JB, Zhang W, Campbell DA, Ghaferi AA. Association between hospital staffing models and failure to rescue. Ann Surg. 2019;270(1):91–4.
Ghaferi AA, Birkmeyer JD, Dimick JB. Complications, failure to rescue, and mortality with major inpatient surgery in Medicare patients. Ann Surg. 2009;250(6):1029–34.
Sharoky CE, Martin ND, Smith BP, Pascual JL, Kaplan LJ, Reilly PM, Holena DN. The location and timing of failure-to-rescue events across a statewide trauma system. J Surg Res. 2019;235:529–35.
Haas B, Gomez D, Hemmila MR, Nathens AB. Prevention of complications and successful rescue of patients with serious complications: characteristics of high-performing trauma centers. J Trauma. 2011;70(3):575–82.
Ingraham AM, Xiong W, Hemmila MR, Shafi S, Goble S, Neal ML, Nathens AB. The attributable mortality and length of stay of trauma-related complications: a matched cohort study. Ann Surg. 2010;252(2):358–62.
Ong AW, Omert LA, Vido D, Goodman BM, Protetch J, Rodriguez A, Jeremitsky E. Characteristics and outcomes of trauma patients with ICU lengths of stay 30 days and greater: a seven-year retrospective study. Crit Care. 2009;13(5):R154.
Hemmila MR, Jakubus JL, Maggio PM, Wahl WL, Dimick JB, Campbell DA Jr, Taheri PA. Real money: complications and hospital costs in trauma patients. Surgery. 2008;144(2):307–16.
Holena DN, Kaufman EJ, Delgado MK, Wiebe DJ, Carr BG, Christie JD, Reilly PM. A metric of our own: failure to rescue after trauma. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2017;83(4):698–704.
Inoue J, Shiraishi A, Yoshiyuki A, Haruta K, Matsui H, Otomo Y. Resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta might be dangerous in patients with severe torso trauma: a propensity score analysis. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2016;80(4):559–66 discussion 566-557.
Zafar SN, Shah AA, Zogg CK, Hashmi ZG, Greene WR, Haut ER, Cornwell EE 3rd, Haider AH. Morbidity or mortality? Variations in trauma centres in the rescue of older injured patients. Injury. 2016;47(5):1091–7.
Hatchimonji JS, Kaufman EJ, Sharoky CE, Ma L, Garcia Whitlock AE, Holena DN. Failure to rescue in surgical patients: a review for acute care surgeons. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2019;87(3);699–706.
Almoudaris AM, Mamidanna R, Faiz O. Failure to rescue in trauma patients: operative interventions must be considered. Ann Surg. 2014;259(6):e85.
Nathens AB, Rivara FP, MacKenzie EJ, Maier RV, Wang J, Egleston B, Scharfstein DO, Jurkovich GJ. The impact of an intensivist-model ICU on trauma-related mortality. Ann Surg. 2006;244(4):545–54.
Chua WC, D'Amours SK, Sugrue M, Caldwell E, Brown K. Performance and consistency of care in admitted trauma patients: our next great opportunity in trauma care? ANZ J Surg. 2009;79(6):443–8.
Holena DN, Earl-Royal E, Delgado MK, Sims CA, Pascual JL, Hsu JY, Carr BG, Reilly PM, Wiebe D. Failure to rescue in trauma: coming to terms with the second term. Injury. 2016;47(1):77–82.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Enago (www.enago.jp) for the English language review. This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI (Grant Number JP19K19376).
Funding
There is no financial support.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
Concept and design: Abe, Komori, Sugiyama, Iriyama, and Kainoh
Acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data: Abe, Komori, Shiraishi, Sugiyama, and Saitoh
Drafting of the manuscript: Abe and Sugiyama
Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: all authors
Statistical analysis: Abe and Sugiyama
Administrative, technical, or material support: Abe, Shiraishi, and Saitoh
Supervision: Shiraishi and Saitoh
The authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Ethics approval and consent to participate
The study protocol was reviewed and approved by the ethics committee of Juntendo University, Japan (IRB No.19-010). The requirement of informed consent from study participants was waived by the ethics committees because of the retrospective and anonymized nature of this study.
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Competing interests
All authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.
About this article
Cite this article
Abe, T., Komori, A., Shiraishi, A. et al. Trauma complications and in-hospital mortality: failure-to-rescue. Crit Care 24, 223 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-020-02951-1
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13054-020-02951-1