Performance of the OTA-OFC3 Classification System for Open Fractures.

Vivian Li,Alice C Bell,David Okhuereigbe,Sara Kheiri,Christina A Stennett,Robert V O'Toole,Nathan N O'Hara,Christopher M Domes,Samir Mehta,Sheila Sprague,Meir T Marmor,Gerard P Slobogean,
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Abstract

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to compare the simplified modification of the Orthopaedic Trauma Association-Open Fracture Classification (OTA-OFC3) with the original OTA-OFC and Gustilo-Anderson classification systems in predicting surgical site infection and unplanned reoperation. METHODS This was a retrospective cohort study conducted using the PREP-IT (A Program of Randomized Trials to Evaluate Preoperative Antiseptic Skin Solutions in Orthopaedic Trauma) trial data of patients with open fractures. The OTA-OFC and Gustilo-Anderson classifications for each included fracture were determined by the treating surgeon at the initial irrigation and debridement. The OTA-OFC3 classification was determined on the basis of the highest severity level in any OTA-OFC domain. The study outcomes included surgical site infection and unplanned reoperations within 1 year of injury. Prognostic performance was measured by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), and AUCs were compared between classifications with z-tests. RESULTS This cohort study included 3,338 patients with 3,627 open fractures. Surgical site infections occurred for 11% of the open fractures, and unplanned reoperations occurred for 15%. The prognostic performance of the new OTA-OFC3 score (AUC, 0.61; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.58 to 0.64) did not differ significantly from that of the Gustilo-Anderson classification (AUC, 0.63; p = 0.40) or the 5 OTA-OFC domains (AUC, 0.64; p = 0.32) in predicting surgical site infection. The prognostic performance of the OTA-OFC3 system (AUC, 0.62; 95% CI, 0.59 to 0.64) was similar to that of the Gustilo-Anderson classification (AUC, 0.63; p = 0.34) but was significantly worse than that of the 5 OTA-OFC domains (AUC, 0.69; p < 0.001) in predicting unplanned reoperations. CONCLUSIONS Simplifying the OTA-OFC to the new OTA-OFC3 significantly decreased its ability to predict unplanned reoperations and did not improve the ability to predict surgical site infection. These findings indicate that this newly proposed classification system, although clinically simpler, omits important prognostic information captured in the original OTA-OFC. Despite this limitation, the OTA-OFC3 demonstrated prognostic performance similar to that of the commonly used Gustilo-Anderson classification, and it may provide a clinically convenient way to communicate critical OTA-OFC information when all OTA-OFC domains are being assessed for research or quality-improvement purposes. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Prognostic Level III. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
OTA-OFC3分类系统在开放性骨折中的应用
本研究的目的是比较简化后的骨科创伤协会开放性骨折分类(OTA-OFC3)与原始的OTA-OFC和gustillo - anderson分类系统在预测手术部位感染和意外再手术方面的差异。方法:这是一项回顾性队列研究,使用PREP-IT(评估骨科创伤术前皮肤消毒方案的随机试验计划)试验数据对开放性骨折患者进行研究。每个骨折的OTA-OFC和Gustilo-Anderson分类由治疗外科医生在初始冲洗和清创时确定。OTA-OFC3分类是根据任何OTA-OFC域中的最高严重级别确定的。研究结果包括手术部位感染和1年内意外再手术。预后表现以受试者工作特征曲线下面积(AUC)衡量,并采用z检验比较不同分类间的AUC。结果:该队列研究纳入3338例开放性骨折患者,共3627例。手术部位感染发生率为11%,意外再手术发生率为15%。新OTA-OFC3评分的预后表现(AUC, 0.61;95%置信区间[CI], 0.58 ~ 0.64)与Gustilo-Anderson分类(AUC, 0.63;p = 0.40)或5个OTA-OFC域(AUC, 0.64;P = 0.32)预测手术部位感染。OTA-OFC3系统的预后性能(AUC, 0.62;95% CI, 0.59 ~ 0.64)与Gustilo-Anderson分类相似(AUC, 0.63;p = 0.34),但显著低于5个OTA-OFC域(AUC, 0.69;P < 0.001)预测意外再手术。结论将OTA-OFC简化为新的OTA-OFC3显著降低了其预测意外再手术的能力,但并未提高预测手术部位感染的能力。这些发现表明,这种新提出的分类系统虽然在临床上更简单,但忽略了原始OTA-OFC中捕获的重要预后信息。尽管存在这种局限性,但OTA-OFC3的预后表现与常用的Gustilo-Anderson分类相似,当所有OTA-OFC域被评估用于研究或质量改进目的时,它可能提供一种临床方便的方式来交流关键的OTA-OFC信息。证据水平:预后III级。有关证据水平的完整描述,请参见作者说明。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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