Abdominal angiography is associated with reduced in-hospital mortality among pediatric patients with blunt splenic and hepatic injury: A propensity-score-matching study from the national trauma registry in Japan

Space: StayCurrentMD Author: Kenichiro Ishida, Yusuke Katayama, Tetsuhisa Kitamura, Tomoya Hirose, Shunichiro Nakao, Yutaka Umemura, Takeyuki Kiguchi, Tasuku Matsuyama, Kosuke Kiyohara, Takeshi Shimazu, Mitsuo Ohnishi Published:

Author / Expert

Kenichiro Ishida, Yusuke Katayama, Tetsuhisa Kitamura, Tomoya Hirose, Shunichiro Nakao, Yutaka Umemura, Takeyuki Kiguchi, Tasuku Matsuyama, Kosuke Kiyohara, Takeshi Shimazu, Mitsuo Ohnishi

Topic overview

Abstract

Purpose

The aim of this study was to assess the association between the implementation of abdominal angiography and outcome among pediatric patients with blunt splenic or hepatic injury.

Methods

This was a retrospective observational study, with a study period of 14 years, from January 2004 to December 2017. Blunt-trauma patients with splenic or hepatic injury who were less than 19 years old were included in this study. We used propensity-score-(PS) matching analysis to assess the relationship between abdominal angiography and in-hospital mortality.

Results

In total, 639 patients were eligible for analysis, with 257 patients included in the abdominal-angiography group and 382 patients in the no-abdominal-angiography group. After PS matching, 224 patients from each group were selected. In the PS matched patients, in-hospital mortality was lower in the abdominal-angiography group than in the no-abdominal-angiography group (4.9% vs. 11.2%, odds ratio 0.416, 95% confidence interval 0.177–0.903).

Conclusion

In this population, the implementation of abdominal angiography was significantly associated with lower in-hospital mortality among pediatric patients with blunt splenic or hepatic injury compared with nonimplementation of abdominal angiography.

Type of study

Prognosis study.

Level of evidence

III

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