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Emergency versus semi-elective management of mandible fractures: a Maxillofacial Trainee Research Collaborative (MTReC) study

Recent evidence suggests that acute emergency management of mandible fractures does not improve surgical outcomes yet is associated with increased financial burden. Current NHS policy advocating for increased adoption of day-case and semi-elective surgical procedures to reduce bed strain must be bal...

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Published in:Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England 2023-05, Vol.105 (5), p.461-468
Main Authors: Hughes, D, Ng, S M, Smyth, D, Patel, H, Kent, S, Henry, A, Blore, C, Dawoud, B, Kumar, D, Jefferies, C, Kyzas, P, Collaborators, MTReC
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container_issue 5
container_start_page 461
container_title Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England
container_volume 105
creator Hughes, D
Ng, S M
Smyth, D
Patel, H
Kent, S
Henry, A
Blore, C
Dawoud, B
Kumar, D
Jefferies, C
Kyzas, P
Collaborators, MTReC
description Recent evidence suggests that acute emergency management of mandible fractures does not improve surgical outcomes yet is associated with increased financial burden. Current NHS policy advocating for increased adoption of day-case and semi-elective surgical procedures to reduce bed strain must be balanced with providing timely, effective treatment. Our research aims to determine patient groups currently managed via semi-elective admission and whether this can be extended to other groups to provide safe and effective management of mandible fractures. A multi-national trainee-led audit of mandibular fractures across 49 units was completed by the Maxillofacial Trainee Research Collaborative (MTReC). Each unit prospectively collected data on fractures on admission and at follow-up. Data collected included patient demographics, behaviour, health, injury, timing to intervention and surgical complications. Data were collected on 947 mandibular fractures. Of the surgically managed patients, 649 (90%) were managed via acute emergency admission at the time of presentation, while 68 (10%) were managed semi-electively. Patient demographics, injury pattern and mechanism appeared to significantly affect timing of management, whereas patient behaviour, health status, timing of injury and presentation did not. Semi-elective management was associated with a significantly shorter inpatient duration (0.9 versus 1.9 days, =0.000) with no differences in readmission, antibiotic usage or surgical complications ( =1.000, RR 1.030). Our study demonstrates the efficacy of planned admissions and semi-elective management of mandibular fractures. Simple mandibular fractures in compliant patients are suitable for semi-elective treatment. Holistic patient assessment and tailored surgical planning is crucial in determining admission modality to effectively manage mandibular trauma.
doi_str_mv 10.1308/rcsann.2022.0063
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subjects Anti-Bacterial Agents
Antibiotics
Collaboration
Fracture Fixation, Internal - methods
Hospitals
Humans
Length of stay
Mandible
Mandibular Fractures - surgery
Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery
Oral hygiene
Patient satisfaction
Retrospective Studies
Smoking
Statistical significance
Surgery
Surgical outcomes
Trauma
Treatment Outcome
title Emergency versus semi-elective management of mandible fractures: a Maxillofacial Trainee Research Collaborative (MTReC) study
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