External Validation of the Clinical Pre-hospital "Red- Flag" Alert for Activation of Intra-hospital Hemorrhage Control Response in Blunt Trauma.
- Conditions
- Trauma Injury
- Registration Number
- NCT05820217
- Lead Sponsor
- University Hospital, Angers
- Brief Summary
External validation of the clinical pre-hospital "Red- Flag" alert for activation of intra-hospital hemorrhage control response in blunt trauma.
- Detailed Description
Severe trauma, with a variety of causes, is responsible for more than 9% of the world's population and is the leading cause of preventable mortality among 15-35 year olds. Massive hemorrhage remains the second leading cause of early mortality in those traumatized after head trauma, accounting for about 40% of deaths. In 71% of cases this mortality is pre-hospital without access to rapid medicalization. Intra-hospital mortality is also important.
The main factors explaining this mortality in patients with severe bleeding are delays in recognition and management. The effectiveness of the "trauma systems" and the management channels for severe traumatized injuries are thus generally assessed by the intra-hospital mortality rate. Optimal and early management is therefore essential from the pre-hospital phase.
The treatment of traumatic hemorrhagic shock requires means of local hemostasis, medication management and can go as far as the establishment of massive transfusion protocols (PTM). This type of PTM is activated in about 8% of cases. While it is little practiced in pre-hospital and still debated today, its early hospital establishment is essential.
Rym Hamada et al. highlighted a predictive score "RED-FLAG" of severe hemorrhage in severe traumatized patients requiring the immediate implementation of rapid hemorrhage control (activation of PTM, hemostasis surgery, etc.).
This score is based on 5 clinico-biological items. A score of 2 or more is predictive of an immediate intra-hospital action of hemostasis. In France, several networks are organized around centers 15 and hospitals specialized in the management of severe traumatized, from alert to definitive treatment, in accordance with the international recommendations in force.
The objective of this study is to perform external and prospective validation, within a new cohort, of the "RED-FLAGS" score. For this, we are conducting a multicenter and prospective study
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 630
- Adult patients (More than 18 yo)
- Regulated by the medical regulation centers (SAMU - centres 15) of the hospitals of Angers (SAMU 49), Rennes (SAMU 35), Le Mans (SAMU 72), Tours (SAMU 37), Laval (SAMU 53) and Chambéry (SAMU 73)
- Patients with severe trauma classified as A or B
- And benefiting respectively from hospital support in trauma centers
- Not subject to limitation of active therapeutics
- Member or beneficiary of a social security scheme
Exclusion criteria:
- Patients with Not Considered Severe Trauma (Not A, B or C) after pre-hospital medical assessment
- Patient objecting to participating in research
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Specific intra-hospital severe haemorrhage response 24 hours The main evaluation criterion is defined, as in the initial study by Hamada et al., by the presence of intrahospital criteria for severe hemorrhage justifying an immediate intrahospital action of hemostasis, defined by:
* Red Blood Cell Concentrate transfusion required upon arrival at trauma center
* Transfusion of at least 4 CGR within the first 6 hours of hospital management
* Lactacidemy 5 mmol/L at first blood collection
* Need for hemostasis surgery or radiology interventional prior to completion of a pan-body CT lesion assessment
* Death from hemorrhagic shock within first 24 hours admission
The ability of the RED-FLAG score to detect patients with severe hospital bleeding requiring immediate hemostasis action (as defined above) will be assessed by determining the area under the curve and its 95% CI of the ROC curve of this score.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Comparison of the two RED-FLAG and BATT scores 24 hours We will compare the two BATT score and the RED-FLAG scores results and their possible correlation between. We will use the Pearson linear coefficient to make the comparison.
The BATT (Bleeding Audit for Trauma \& Triage) score is a score with a minimum of 0 and a maximum of 27 points. Its identifies trauma patient at risk of significant haemorrhage. A score of 2 or more would be an appropriate threshold for pre-hospital tranexamic acid treatment.
The RED-FLAG score is a score with a minimum of 0 and a maximum of 5 points. A score greater than or equal to 2 points identifies severe blunt trauma patients during the pre-hospital care phase and activating a specific immediate intra-hospital haemorrhage control response prior to arrival.