학술논문

Contemporary management of high-grade renal trauma
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery. 84(3)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Prevention
Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects
Kidney Disease
Patient Safety
Clinical Research
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.4 Surgery
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Aged
80 and over
Disease Management
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Injury Severity Score
Kidney
Male
Middle Aged
Prognosis
Prospective Studies
Societies
Medical
Time Factors
Trauma Centers
Trauma Severity Indices
Traumatology
Urogenital System
Wounds
Nonpenetrating
Wounds
Penetrating
Young Adult
Renal trauma
renal injury grading
wounds and injuries
trauma centers
multicenter study
Genito-Urinary Trauma Study Group
Clinical sciences
Nursing
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe rarity of renal trauma limits its study and the strength of evidence-based guidelines. Although management of renal injuries has shifted toward a nonoperative approach, nephrectomy remains the most common intervention for high-grade renal trauma (HGRT). We aimed to describe the contemporary management of HGRT in the United States and also evaluate clinical factors associated with nephrectomy after HGRT.MethodsFrom 2014 to 2017, data on HGRT (American Association for the Surgery of Trauma grades III-V) were collected from 14 participating Level-1 trauma centers. Data were gathered on demographics, injury characteristics, management, and short-term outcomes. Management was classified into three groups-expectant, conservative/minimally invasive, and open operative. Descriptive statistics were used to report management of renal trauma. Univariate and multivariate logistic mixed effect models with clustering by facility were used to look at associations between proposed risk factors and nephrectomy.ResultsA total of 431 adult HGRT were recorded; 79% were male, and mechanism of injury was blunt in 71%. Injuries were graded as III, IV, and V in 236 (55%), 142 (33%), and 53 (12%), respectively. Laparotomy was performed in 169 (39%) patients. Overall, 300 (70%) patients were managed expectantly and 47 (11%) underwent conservative/minimally invasive management. Eighty-four (19%) underwent renal-related open operative management with 55 (67%) of them undergoing nephrectomy. Nephrectomy rates were 15% and 62% for grades IV and V, respectively. Penetrating injuries had significantly higher American Association for the Surgery of Trauma grades and higher rates of nephrectomy. In multivariable analysis, only renal injury grade and penetrating mechanism of injury were significantly associated with undergoing nephrectomy.ConclusionExpectant and conservative management is currently utilized in 80% of HGRT; however, the rate of nephrectomy remains high. Clinical factors, such as surrogates of hemodynamic instability and metabolic acidosis, are associated with nephrectomy for HGRT; however, higher renal injury grade and penetrating trauma remain the strongest associations.Level of evidencePrognostic/epidemiologic study, level III; Therapeutic study, level IV.