Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5730966 | The American Journal of Surgery | 2017 | 5 Pages |
BackgroundA number or risk assessment tools are used in trauma victims. Because of its simplicity, we examined the ability of the recently described quick Sequential Organ Failure Assessment Score (qSOFA) to predict outcomes in blunt trauma patients presenting to the Emergency Department.MethodsWe queried the trauma registry at a Level 1 Trauma Center for all adult blunt trauma admissions between 1/1/10 and 9/30/15. qSOFA scores were the sum of binary scores for 3 variables (RR â¥Â 22, SBPâ¤100 mmHg, and GCSâ¤13).ResultsThere were 7064 admissions (5664 admissions had qSOFA = 0, 1164 had qSOFA = 1, 223 had qSOFA = 2, and 13 had qSOFA = 3). Higher qSOFA scores were associated with greater injury severity, increased ICU admission, and higher complication rates. qSOFA scores were associated with in-hospital mortality (1.7% with qSOFA = 0; 8.7% with qSOFA = 1; 22.4% with qSOFA = 2; 23.1% with qSOFA = 3; p < 0.001). On multivariate analysis, qSOFA score was an independent predictor of mortality.ConclusionsqSOFA scores are directly associated with adverse outcomes in blunt trauma victims.