Keywords
Trauma, Triage, systematic review, protocol.
International evidence has demonstrated significant improvements both in the trauma care process and outcomes for patients through re-configuring care services from that which is fragmented to integrated trauma networks. A backbone of any trauma network is a trauma triage tool. This is necessary to support paramedic staff in identifying major trauma patients based on prehospital characteristics. However, there is no consensus on an optimal triage tool and with that, no consensus on the minimum criteria for prehospital identification of major trauma.
Examine the prehospital characteristics applied in the international literature to identify major trauma patients.
To ensure the systematic review is both as comprehensive and complete as possible, we will apply a hybrid overview of reviews approach in accordance with best practice guidelines. Searches will be conducted in Pubmed (Ovid MEDLINE), Embase, Cochrane Library of Systematic Reviews and Cochrane Central Register of Clinical Trials. We will search for papers that analyse prehospital characteristics applied in trauma triage tools that identify major trauma patients. These papers will be all systematic reviews in the area, not limited by year of publication, supplemented with an updated search of original papers from November 2019. Duplication screening of all articles will be conducted by two reviewers and a third reviewer to arbitrate disputes. Data will be extracted using a pre-defined data extraction form, and quality appraised by the Newcastle Ottawa Quality Assessment form.
An exhaustive search for both systematic reviews and original papers will identify the range of tools developed in the international literature and, importantly, the prehospital characteristics that have been applied to identify major trauma patients. The findings of this review will inform the development of a national clinical prediction rule for triage of major trauma patients.
Trauma, Triage, systematic review, protocol.
We have addressed the reviewers’ comments in the paper. These include:
See the authors' detailed response to the review by Zainab Samaan
See the authors' detailed response to the review by Stefan Candefjord, Mattias Seth and Anna Bakidou
Trauma is a leading cause of death and disability globally1–3. Nearly 6 million people die each year because of traumatic injuries4. It is estimated that such fatalities account for 10% of deaths globally4, with trauma being the leading cause of death and disability among those aged under 355.
Trauma care in Ireland has traditionally been based on the practice of bringing trauma patients to the nearest hospital in the first instance6. This has resulted in fragmentation of trauma care. Patients often go to hospitals that cannot provide the specialties required. Consequently, a considerable proportion of trauma patients are transferred to another hospital to cater for their injuries. For example, in 2018, 20% of trauma patients were subsequently transferred to a second hospital7. The publication of ‘A Trauma system for Ireland’ signalled the need to reform the delivery of trauma care in Ireland. The report recommended the establishment of trauma networks8. The trauma care system in Ireland is undergoing a process of re-configuration to enable such networks. These networks will be made up of major trauma centres (for severe injuries) at the network hub, and Trauma Units, Local Emergency Hospitals (for less severe injuries) forming the spokes. This is to ensure patients are brought quickly and seamlessly to the most appropriate hospital to manage their injuries.
International evidence has demonstrated significant improvements both in the trauma care process and outcomes for patients through re-configuring care services from that which is fragmented to fully integrated inclusive trauma networks9. Such networks cater for the continuum of trauma complexity, with a Major Trauma Centre (MTC) at its hub networked with Trauma Units, Local Emergency Hospitals and Local Injury Units required to deal with the continuum of trauma complexity. Studies from the UK, USA and Australia suggest trauma networks reduce mortality by 15% to 25%, shortens hospital length of stay by an average of four days, lower the odds of readmission to hospital and are cost-effective10–14.
A backbone of any trauma network is a trauma triage tool. This is necessary to support paramedic staff in identifying major trauma patients based on prehospital characteristics, these are patient characteristics measured before reaching a hospital setting. A trauma triage tool informs the hospital destination and associated level of trauma care required15. Thus, a trauma triage tool is regarded as an integral part of an integrated trauma-care pathway, from incident to hospital discharge.
The accuracy of a triage tool is based on the tool’s ability to correctly identify those with and without severe injuries. Under triage occurs when patients with severe injuries are incorrectly brought to a lower-level facility16. This is associated with increased mortality, delayed diagnosis, and decreased functional outcomes17. Conversely, over triage occurs when patients with less severe injuries are admitted to higher level care facilities16. This results in overburdening major trauma centres and consequently unnecessary hospital resource use18. In addition, where patients are over triaged, bypassed to a major trauma centre without clinical need, this can also adds undue distress to the patient-family dyad given longer distances to travel to visit loved-ones in hospital.
The American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma (ACS-COT) recommends acceptable over triage rates of 25–35% and under triage of 5%16. There is considerable international literature on the development of triage tools that have aimed at reducing over and under triage by standardising triage criteria15,17. However, a number of systematic reviews in the area have found the current triage tools do not meet international guidance for acceptable over or under triage rates17,19–21. Consequently, there is no consensus on an optimal triage tool17 and with that, no consensus on the minimum criteria for prehospital identification of major trauma21.
Therefore, this hybrid systematic review aims to summarise the evidence base on the prehospital characteristics that identify major trauma patients. An exhaustive search for systematic reviews in the area along with original papers will identify the range of tools developed and, importantly, the prehospital characteristics that have been applied to identify major trauma patients. Examining and synthesizing the prehospital characteristics applied to identify major trauma patients will inform the development of future trauma triage tools.
Examine the prehospital characteristics applied in the international literature to identify major trauma patients.
As several systematic reviews have examined the degree to which different triage tools successfully identify major trauma patients, we will conduct a hybrid overview of reviews in accordance with best practice guidelines for overview of reviews22–24. To ensure the review is both as comprehensive and complete as possible, we will apply a hybrid approach to the systematic review, as was applied in a recent review25. For this hybrid approach, we will employ two search strategies. Firstly, we will find all systematic reviews in the area, not limited by year of publication, and use the content of those reviews to find triage tools that identify major trauma patients. We will extract the data both in the systematic reviews and the original papers on the prehospital characteristics that are included in each of the trauma triage tools. This first search for systematic reviews will be supplemented with a second search which will be an updated search of original papers that analyse the ability of a triage tool to identify major trauma patients. These original papers will be published from November 2019, the date of the search in the most recently published systematic review in the area15.
This protocol has been registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) database (Protocol Number: CRD42023393094). The hybrid systematic review is reported in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA-P) updated guidelines for reporting systematic reviews26. The completed PRISMA-P Checklist can be found in the extended data file (10.6084/m9.figshare.22664665).
Types of studies: Systematic reviews of trauma triage tools that aim to identify major trauma patients along with the original papers included in these reviews. These systematic reviews will not be limited by year of publication or destination to which trauma patients were brought.
We will also identify recent papers (published from November 2019) that analyse prehospital characteristics associated with major trauma patients. Only English language papers will be included. We will exclude studies of triage outside of the prehospital setting, studies concerned with mass casualty trauma events, in-hospital trauma team response, studies only concerned with activation of helicopter response.
Types of Participants: We will include trauma patients, be this children, young people and adults experiencing major trauma. Studies that are confined to specific population (paediatrics or geriatrics) will be included in the review. If a study has been confined to a paediatric or geriatric population, it will be noted as noted as part of the data extraction criteria. We will exclude patient with medical needs that are not the direct result of an injury (diabetes, osteoporosis etc.).
Types of exposure: Prehospital characteristics applied in trauma triage tools that are associated with major trauma. These characteristics will included, but are not limited to, patient characteristics (age, sex etc.), Physiologic characteristics (blood pressure, respiratory rate, Glasgow Coma Score etc.), mechanism of injury (fall, crash etc.), injury characteristics (penetrating or blunt force injury, body region(s) injured etc.). Medical needs that are not the direct result of an injury (e.g., diabetes) will be excluded. Triage tools that do not apply a standardised approach to assess prehospital characteristics or the hospital characteristics are not described in the tool will be excluded.
Types of outcome:
Primary outcome: Major trauma will be defined by the same standard that is applied in the international literature. That is, an Injury Severity Score (ISS) of >1527.
Secondary outcomes: Sensitivity analyses will examine alternative definitions of major trauma. This will include: intensive care admission, death in the Emergency Department, patients transferred in/out of hospital for specialist care28, and the New Injury Severity Score (NISS)29. We will also examine different thresholds of ISS and NISS to identify major trauma30. To support this, the definition(s) of major trauma applied in each paper will be noted as part of the data extraction criteria. Where a paper applies more than one definition, both will be recorded and analysed separately in the analysis.
Comparators: Where possible, the triage tools will be compared with each other. That is, the prehospital characteristics identified in each triage tool and in particular the thresholds for those characteristics will be compared between studies.
Databases: We will employ two search strategies. Firstly, a literature search of systematic reviews published in English not limited by year of publication (from inception to 31st January 2023). This search will be supplemented by a search for original papers that analyse the ability of a triage tool to identify major trauma patients published from 1st November 2019 to 31st January 2023. Both of the searches for systematic reviews and original papers will be conducted in the following databases: Pubmed (Ovid MEDLINE), Embase, Cochrane Library of Systematic Reviews and Cochrane Central Register of Clinical Trials.
Search Terms: The search strategy for this hybrid review was created with the support of an Information Specialist in RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences (AS) who is experienced in database searching and systematic review search strategy refinement. This included a search of subject headings, sub-headings, keywords, concept words and associated synonyms. This included: Trauma, Trauma Centres, trauma system; triage, under triage, over triage; systematic review, meta-analysis (only when searching specifically for systematic reviews). The search strategy for each database can be found in the extended file (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.24487039.v1).
Study selection: Results will be imported to EndNote software and duplicate articles will be removed. Two reviewers (ML and RZ) will undertake duplicate screening of titles and abstracts of papers identified by the literature search. Papers that do not meet the inclusion criteria will be excluded. Disagreements will be discussed with a third reviewer (ND). All papers identified as potentially relevant will be retrieved and read in full to determine eligibility for inclusion.
Data extraction: A pre-defined data extraction template will be applied. Data will be extracted to Microsoft Excel. Extracted data will include the study author(s), year of publication, study design, study population and country, sample size, sample eligibility criteria, name of the triage tool or protocol, pre-hospital characteristics used in the triage protocol or tool to identify major trauma or severely injured patients and measures of major trauma applied in the study. Where there is insufficient data in the published paper we will contact authors to provide further information.
Assessment of quality: The Newcastle Ottawa Quality Assessment form for cohort studies will be used to assess the quality of studies included in the review31. The scale is a recommended assessment tool for observational studies by the Cochrane Collaboration32. The tool assesses several aspects of study quality including, selection, comparability and outcome assessment.
Data synthesis: The objective of the review is to examine the prehospital characteristics applied in the international literature to identify major trauma patients. In particular, to comprehensively identify the prehospital characteristics and the thresholds applied in those tools that identify major trauma patients. Therefore, narrative synthesis will be the most appropriate method to present the results. This will include the summary characteristics of the tools, the patient populations in which they are applied, the frequency in which certain prehospital patient characteristics are employed in the international literature and, importantly, the thresholds applied in each tool will be presented.
Analysis of subgroups: Where possible, we will analyse the prehospital characteristics included in tools that are applied in certain patient populations separating out those tools that are specific to paediatric and geriatric populations.
Given resource constraints, it will not be possible for us to include non-English language publications. Potentially, this may result in the omission of some non-English tools. However, based on previous reviews in the area, it would appear that tools from non-English speaking countries (such as France, the Netherlands and Norway) have been translated and published in English33–35. Thus, we do not anticipate the omission of many non-English language publications.
In tandem with this, also given resource constraints, it will also not be possible for us to include scoping reviews. Potentially, this may result in the omission of trauma triage tools. However, these tools should not have been missed by systematic reviews conducted to date. Therefore, we do not anticipate the omission of scoping reviews would significantly impact the study findings.
As the study focuses on the prehospital characteristics applied in trauma triage tools, the search concerned triage tools only. Studies that analyse the characteristics related to major trauma but did not develop a triage tool were excluded. Potentially this may result in the omission of some prehospital characteristics. However, given the decades of research in the area, it is unlikely that pertinent variables have been omitted from the trauma triage tools developed to date. Therefore, we do not anticipate a significant impact on the study findings given the omission of such studies.
In developing the search strategy, we ran exploratory searches and found the use of the terms ‘assessment’ or ‘evaluation’ led to too broad a search, with many thousands of extra irrelevant hits, which we do not have the resources to countenance. This may result in the omission of potentially relevant articles. However, given our hybrid approach of searching for systematic reviews, supplemented with the search for individual studies from more recent literature, it is unlikely that important articles will have been omitted.
In searching for systematic reviews, there is always a risk that a search strategy applied in those systematic reviews will omit a relevant article, or that reviewers will incorrectly classify a paper as irrelevant. However, this risk is mitigated by reviewing the reference lists of articles that are included, and the ‘cited by’ function in Google Scholar for these articles also. It is very unlikely that using these methods along with our combination of searching for systematic reviews, supplemented with individual studies from more recent literature, will omit important articles. This is especially the case as the more recent articles will most likely cite other recent literature.
Finally, we have excluded tools that do not apply standardised approaches for assessment. Potentially, this could result in the omission of tools that are based on modern technology that have yet to establish a standardised approach to assessment. We have excluded tools with non-standardised approaches to assessment as the review is being conducted to inform the development of future trauma triage tools to be used by paramedics to identify major trauma patients. As the tool would be used by a range of practitioners in a range of contexts, it is important that standardised approaches for assessment are included. Should the approach not be standardised, there is a potential that this could expose patients to sub-optimal clinical decision-making. These could be explored in further research in the future.
The aim of this hybrid systematic review is to summarise the evidence base on the prehospital characteristics that identify major trauma patients. An exhaustive search for both systematic reviews and original papers will identify the range of tools developed in the international literature and, importantly, the prehospital characteristics that have been applied to identify major trauma patients. The findings of this review will inform the development of a national clinical prediction rule for triage of major trauma patients. The findings of this review will therefore be of value to a wide range of trauma care stakeholders, including prehospital emergency care providers, hospital clinicians and the wider trauma care research community.
This hybrid systematic review will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications and presented at national and international conferences.
We are currently screening study titles and abstract for this review. We anticipate the review will be completed by March 2024.
Figshare. Extended Data File 1: Completed PRISMA-P checklist. DOI: 10.6084/m9.figshare.22664665
Figshare. Extended Data File 2: Search Strategy. DOI: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.24487039.v1
Data are available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC-BY 4.0).
This hybrid systematic review protocol has been reported in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA-P) updated guidelines for reporting systematic reviews26. The completed PRISMA-P checklist can be found in the extended data file (10.6084/m9.figshare.22664665).
Is the rationale for, and objectives of, the study clearly described?
Yes
Is the study design appropriate for the research question?
Yes
Are sufficient details of the methods provided to allow replication by others?
Yes
Are the datasets clearly presented in a useable and accessible format?
Not applicable
Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed.
Reviewer Expertise: Systemic reviews, psychiatric disorders, health research methodology.
Is the rationale for, and objectives of, the study clearly described?
Partly
Is the study design appropriate for the research question?
Yes
Are sufficient details of the methods provided to allow replication by others?
No
Are the datasets clearly presented in a useable and accessible format?
Not applicable
References
1. Tohira H, Jacobs I, Mountain D, Gibson N, et al.: Systematic review of predictive performance of injury severity scoring tools.Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med. 2012; 20: 63 PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full TextCompeting Interests: No competing interests were disclosed.
Reviewer Expertise: The reviewers work at Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden, with digital health and decision support, risk prediction models for patients with potentially life-threatening conditions, using tools such as mathematical models including artificial intelligence.
Alongside their report, reviewers assign a status to the article:
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