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Journal Article

Citation

Smith MT, Allorto NL, Clarke DL. Burns 2016; 42(6): 1340-1344.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery, Pietermaritzburg Metropolitan Complex, University of Kwa-Zulu Natal, South Africa.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.burns.2016.03.024

PMID

27143339

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Survival following a major burn is highly dependent on the availability of care and expensive resources such as critical care services, modern dressings and access to operating theatres. Scoring systems, which predict mortality have been developed and can be used to identify patients in whom the outlay of these resources is futile. The aim of this study was to analyse the mortality at a regional South African burn service and to see if these scoring models developed in a resource rich environment were applicable to our setting.

METHODS: Consecutive admissions to the Edendale burn service, South Africa were collected from patient records over a 2-year period from July 2013 to June 2015. Demographic, burn details and final outcome (lived or died) were captured for statistical analysis. Each patient was scored using the Modified Baux, Coste et al., Belgian Outcome of Burn Injury (BOBI) and Abbreviated Burn Severity Index (ABSI) scores. Validation of models and inferential statistics were done to determine new breakpoints more applicable to our sample.

RESULTS: A total of 748 patients were included in the sample, with a mortality rate of 7.1%. The mean Modified Baux score was 27 (range 1-134), with the new breakpoint of 40 predicting 74% of the mortalities compared to the 42% predicted by the old breakpoint of 75. The mean ABSI score was 4 (range 2-15), with a lower break point of 6 predicting 75% of deaths compared to 42% with the old breakpoint of 8. The mean Coste score for the sample was 12 (range 0-100). With a suggested break point of 85 (predicting 50% mortality), only 6% of mortalities were predicted. The new break point of 17 predicted 91% of deaths. The original break point for the BOBI score was 6 (range 0-7). This included 42% of deaths. With a new breakpoint of 1, 74% of deaths were predicted.

DISCUSSION: Our data has shown that in our environment a significant number of fatalities occur in patients with potentially salvageable burns, and the breakpoints for the mortality prediction scores such as, the Modified Baux score, Coste et al. score, BOBI and ABSI scores are much lower than high-income countries. However these mortality predictive scores can be used in a resource scarce South African setting to triage patients into risk categories by lowering the breakpoints. This may facilitate early and more aggressive management of high-risk burn patients, improving survival rates, as well as efficient and judicious use of critical care and other resources.

Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd and ISBI. All rights reserved.


Language: en

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