Increased long-term pneumonia risk for the trauma-related splenectomized population - a population-based, propensity score matching study

2020 
Abstract Background Splenectomy is the life-saving treatment for high-grade spleen trauma. Splenectomized patients are at a significant infection risk. However, the trauma-induced splenectomy results in less incidence of postsplenectomy infection than the hematologic disorder. We conducted a large-scale study to identify the infection rate and management strategy in trauma-related splenic injuries. Methods We included patients with the diagnosis of spleen injury in Taiwan from January 2003 to December 2013 by using the National Health Insurance Database and divided them into spleen preserved and splenectomized groups. The demographic factors including age, sex, hospital level, year of injury, trauma mechanism, associated injuries, whether injury severity score ≧16, and comorbidities were extracted. A 1:1 propensity score match was performed, and we analyzed the long-term outcome as the presence of infection-related disease (septicemia, pneumonia, and meningitis) after spleen trauma. The multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to identify the risk factor for each outcome. Results During the 11 years included in this study, a total of 8,897 patients with spleen trauma were identified. A total of 3,520 (39.6%) patients were splenectomized, and 5,377 (60.4%) were spleen preserved. After propensity score matching, 3,099 pairs of patients were enrolled for further analysis. In univariate analysis, the incidence of pneumonia is significantly higher in the splenectomized group (8.5% vs 7.0%, P = .037). There was no significant difference in septicemia and meningitis between the 2 groups. In multivariate analysis, splenectomy is an independent risk factor for pneumonia in long-term follow-up. Conclusion Compared with the spleen preserved group, splenectomy is related to an increased likelihood of long-term pneumonia onset but not to an increase in the possibility of other infections.
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