DoD-VA创伤感染研究合作。

Jay McDonald, S. Liang, Ping Li, L. Stewart, D. Tribble
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We provide a summary of the development, methodology, and status of an effective collaboration between the Infectious Disease Clinical Research Program and the St. Louis VA Health Care System with the multicenter, observational Trauma Infectious Disease Outcomes Study (TIDOS), which examines the short- and long-term outcomes of deployment-related trauma.\n\n\nMETHODS\nAs part of TIDOS, wounded service members who transitioned to participating military hospitals in the United States (2009-2014) were given the opportunity to enroll in a prospective follow-up cohort study to continue to capture infection-related data after their hospital discharge. Enrollees in the TIDOS cohort who left military service and received health care through the VA also had the option of consenting to have relevant VA medical records abstracted and included with the study data. Infections considered to be complications resulting from the initial trauma were examined.\n\n\nRESULTS\nAmong 1,336 TIDOS enrollees, 1,221 (91%) registered and received health care through the VA with 633 (47%) consenting to follow-up using VA records and comprising the TIDOS-VA cohort. Of the first 337 TIDOS-VA cohort enrollees, 38% were diagnosed with a new trauma-related infection following hospital discharge (median: 88 days; interquartile range: 18-351 days). Approximately 71% of the infections were identified through DoD sources (medical records and follow-up) and 29% were identified through VA electronic medical records, demonstrating the utility of DoD-VA collaborations. The TIDOS DoD-VA collaboration has also been utilized to assess intermediate and long-term consequences of specific injury patterns. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景在战争结束后,离开现役并有资格通过退伍军人事务部(VA)获得医疗保健的受伤军人人数激增。国防部(DoD)和退伍军人事务部之间的合作对于获取全面数据和进一步了解战场创伤的长期影响至关重要。我们总结了传染病临床研究计划和弗吉尼亚州圣路易斯市卫生保健系统与多中心观察性创伤传染病结果研究(TIDOS)之间有效合作的发展、方法和现状,该研究考察了部署相关创伤的短期和长期结果。方法作为TIDOS的一部分,过渡到美国参与军事医院(2009-2014年)的受伤军人有机会参加一项前瞻性随访队列研究,以在出院后继续获取感染相关数据。TIDOS队列中退出兵役并通过退伍军人事务部接受医疗保健的参与者也可以选择同意提取退伍军人事务部的相关医疗记录并将其纳入研究数据。对被认为是最初创伤引起的并发症的感染进行了检查。结果在1336名TIDOS注册者中,1221人(91%)通过VA注册并接受医疗保健,633人(47%)同意使用VA记录进行随访,并包括TIDOS-VA队列。在首批337名TIDOS-VA队列参与者中,38%在出院后被诊断为新的创伤相关感染(中位数:88 天;四分位间距:18-351 天)。大约71%的感染是通过国防部的来源(医疗记录和随访)确定的,29%是通过退伍军人事务部的电子医疗记录确定的,这表明了国防部与退伍军人事务部合作的效用。TIDOS-DoD-VA合作也被用于评估特定损伤模式的中期和长期后果。在89名患有泌尿生殖系统创伤的TIDOS-VA队列参与者中,36%报告性功能障碍,21%至少发生一次尿路感染,14%有尿潴留/失禁,8%有尿道狭窄。在DoD随访期间,尿路感染率为0.05/年,在VA随访期间为0.07/年。结论通过国防部与退伍军人事务部的合作,对感染相关的结果数据进行了全面的收集,从而更清楚地了解了部署相关创伤造成的长期感染负担。计划中的分析包括评估截肢和/或开放性骨折战斗伤亡人员的骨髓炎,评估与损伤模式相关的心理健康和社会因素,以及检查与传染病负担相关的医疗保健利用和成本。
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DoD-VA Trauma Infection Research Collaboration.
BACKGROUND In the aftermath of wars, there is a surge in the number of wounded service members who leave active duty and become eligible for healthcare through the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Collaborations between the Department of Defense (DoD) and VA are crucial to capture comprehensive data and further understand the long-term impact of battlefield trauma. We provide a summary of the development, methodology, and status of an effective collaboration between the Infectious Disease Clinical Research Program and the St. Louis VA Health Care System with the multicenter, observational Trauma Infectious Disease Outcomes Study (TIDOS), which examines the short- and long-term outcomes of deployment-related trauma. METHODS As part of TIDOS, wounded service members who transitioned to participating military hospitals in the United States (2009-2014) were given the opportunity to enroll in a prospective follow-up cohort study to continue to capture infection-related data after their hospital discharge. Enrollees in the TIDOS cohort who left military service and received health care through the VA also had the option of consenting to have relevant VA medical records abstracted and included with the study data. Infections considered to be complications resulting from the initial trauma were examined. RESULTS Among 1,336 TIDOS enrollees, 1,221 (91%) registered and received health care through the VA with 633 (47%) consenting to follow-up using VA records and comprising the TIDOS-VA cohort. Of the first 337 TIDOS-VA cohort enrollees, 38% were diagnosed with a new trauma-related infection following hospital discharge (median: 88 days; interquartile range: 18-351 days). Approximately 71% of the infections were identified through DoD sources (medical records and follow-up) and 29% were identified through VA electronic medical records, demonstrating the utility of DoD-VA collaborations. The TIDOS DoD-VA collaboration has also been utilized to assess intermediate and long-term consequences of specific injury patterns. Among 89 TIDOS-VA cohort enrollees with genitourinary trauma, 36% reported sexual dysfunction, 21% developed at least one urinary tract infection, 14% had urinary retention/incontinence, and 8% had urethral stricture. The rate of urinary tract infections was 0.05/patient-year during DoD follow-up time and 0.07/patient-year during VA follow-up time. CONCLUSIONS Wider capture of infection-related outcome data through the DoD-VA collaboration provided a clearer picture of the long-term infection burden resulting from deployment-related trauma. Planned analyses include assessment of osteomyelitis among combat casualties with amputations and/or open fractures, evaluation of mental health and social factors related to injury patterns, and examination of health care utilization and cost in relation to infectious disease burdens.
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