From the Journals

Study quantifies occupational exposure risks of EDT


 

FROM THE JOURNAL OF TRAUMA AND ACUTE CARE SURGERY

For trauma patients who are in extremis, thoracotomy in the emergency department can be a lifesaving procedure, but with the high rates of HIV/hepatitis among trauma patients, one that also carries what had been an unknown exposure risk for emergency staff.

A patient is rushed through a hospital corridor. Spotmatik/Thinkstock
A multicenter study has quantified the occupational exposure risk for emergency department thoracotomy (EDT) and found it to be extremely low, and it concluded the risk should not deter emergency department personnel from performing thoracotomy (J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2018:85;78-84).

“The most important findings of this prospective, multicenter study are that occupational exposures were reported in 7.2% of EDT resuscitations and 1.6% of EDT resuscitation participants and that occupational exposure risk appears to be further mitigated with strict PPE [personal protective equipment] compliance to universal precautions,” lead author Andrew Nunn, MD, and his colleagues wrote. Dr. Nunn is a trauma surgeon with Wake Forest Baptist Health in Winston-Salem, N.C.

The researchers surveyed 1,360 emergency department (ED) personnel after they performed 305 EDTs at 16 academic and community trauma centers nationwide in 2015 and 2016. The patients who had an EDT were mostly men ranging in age from 24 to 41 years (90.5%) with penetrating injuries (77.4%) and arrived at the ED after prehospital CPR (56.7%). Twenty-two occupational exposures occurred during 22 of the EDT resuscitations, with trainees sustaining most of them (68.2%). The most common source of injury was sharps, accounting for 86.4% (scalpels, 38.9%; fractured bone, 27.8%; needles, 16.7%; and scissors, 3%).

“Occupational exposures correlated with PPE utilization, as universal precautions during EDT were more often observed in providers who did not sustain occupational exposures, compared with those sustaining exposures,” Dr. Nunn and his coauthors wrote. For example, 98% of those reporting no exposure were gloved versus 91% of those who were exposed (P greater than .05).

Dr. Nunn and his coauthors called the risk of HIV or hepatitis C virus (HCV) transmission during EDT “extraordinarily low.” Based on data from their study, they determined the risk of blood-borne pathogen transmission during an EDT resuscitation is 6 in 1 million for HIV and 1 in 10,000 for HCV, and the individual risk is 1 in 1 million and 3 in 100,000, respectively. Compliance with PPE precautions further limited exposure risk, but the study found that more than 10% of surveyed personnel did not utilize one of the four components of PPE besides gloves – eyewear, mask, gown or hat.

Most – but not all – survey responders followed up after the incidence of exposure. “[A total of] 91.7% of providers reporting their exposures also reported following up with their institution specific occupational exposure protocol,” the investigators wrote.

“Our findings have particular implications for trainees,” the study authors noted, citing the high percentage of injuries in this group. The findings emphasized the need for universal PPE compliance and enforcement by resuscitation team leaders. Nonetheless, the study found that the exposure rates during EDT are no greater than other surgical procedures.

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