Our 12-year trauma registry study analyzed severely injured patients with and without a PRF treated at a single tertiary trauma centre. Several specific features in patient characteristics and injury mechanism and changes over the study period related to high-energy pelvic fractures were revealed.
Similar to our results, other previous studies have shown that patients with PRFs are younger than trauma patients without PRFs. However, the increase in the percentage of severely injured patients > 60 years during the study period was emphasized in the PRF group (from 18 to 27%). Consistently, trauma patients with co-morbidities (pre-injury ASA 3 or 4) became more common. As elderly people become more active and live longer, major trauma in the geriatric population is recognized as a significant challenge to health systems [10]. As the mean population age increases globally, the proportion of elderly people (defined as > 65 years) in Europe is expected to grow to at least 30% by 2050 [11]. The expected further increase in the proportion of elderly patients with high-energy pelvic fractures, along with possible co-morbidities and anticoagulant use, must be recognized when planning treatment algorithms for bleeding pelvic injuries.
Consistent with previous studies, in our study HE-PRFs occurred predominantly among male patients (61%). However, when compared to severely injured patients without a pelvic fracture, females were overrepresented in the PRF group. Even a slight female dominance (52%) existed in the subgroup of pelvic fracture following a self-inflicted injury. Of all PRF patients, 10% were females who attempted suicide by jumping from a height.
Patients with PRF were more likely to have self-inflicted trauma than severely injured patients in the N-PRF group (23% vs 8%, p < 0.001). In this study, 74% of all patients who attempted suicide jumped from a height; 53% of all patients with a self-inflicted injury had a PRF. High falls often lead to severe injuries that include but are not limited to PRF. A significant proportion of injury mechanisms was jumping from a height. The notable incidence of PRF among self-inflicted injuries is thus partially explained by the exclusion criterion in our study; we excluded isolated head injuries (such as a gunshot to the head), which is another typical injury mechanism in suicide attempts in Finland.
Consistent with previous studies, PRFs are often considered to be due to MVAs. Our study showed a significant decrease in MVAs in the PRF group during the 12-year study period (30–16%). In the N-PRF group, only a small, non-significant reduction of MVA was observed (27–25%). Improved safety features in new cars manufactured during the study years likely partially explains the reduction in PRFs following MVA. Other explanations may include traffic-injury prevention programs and investments in better road safety. During the past two decades, remarkable preventive work in road safety has occurred worldwide, including in Finland. According to the European Transport Safety Council 2018 report, road deaths in Finland from 2001 and 2017 decreased 50% (from 433 to 223 deaths per year), with an annual relative change of − 3.2% [12].
Improvement in outcome during the study period was noted in both groups. However, the decrease in 30-day in-hospital mortality was more apparent in the PRF group (from 16 to 9%). As the treatment of a severely injured patient is multifactorial, several reasons could explain this finding. Evolvement in the fields of care, resources, and facilities has an impact. In addition, improved understanding of damage-control resuscitation in the treatment of a bleeding trauma patient (both pre- and in hospital), increased use of prehospital pelvic binders, implementation of a massive transfusion protocol (at the end of 2009 in the HUH trauma centre), better utilization of angioembolization to control trauma-related bleeding, use of thromboelastogram in goal-directed coagulation management, and ongoing education regarding treatment of severe trauma may all play a role.
Based on our findings, we propose that PRFs can no longer be classified as injuries restricted to young men in traffic accidents. In our study, severely injured female patients were much more likely to have a PRF than males (39% vs 23%). In addition, a PRF was present in only 23% of MVAs and motorcycle accidents that led to severe trauma (NISS ≥16). In contrast, 55% of pedestrian trauma patients and 39% of patients with a high fall injury mechanism had a PRF. Almost 23% of all PRF patients were injured while attempting suicide. More than half of the self-inflicted PRF patients were female and more than half of all patients with self-inflicted injury had a PRF. Based on these observations, PRFs should be considered as fundamental injuries among patients with self-inflicted trauma.
Our study has some limitations. This was a retrospective, single-centre register study. As with all registry studies, data quality depends on case completeness, data completeness, and data correctness, which all tend to be lower than in clinical studies [13]. The outcome measure was 30-day in-hospital mortality. In the HTR, no deaths are recorded after discharge or > 30 days after admission; mortality may thus be underestimated. According to previously published data based on two large European registries (TR-DGU in Germany and TARN in England), 4–5% of trauma-related deaths occur > 30 days [14]. We could not include patients who died before hospital admission as these are excluded from the HTR. Our study also has many strengths. The HUH trauma unit is the only tertiary trauma centre in southern Finland and covers 1.8 million inhabitants (25% of Finnish population), which also makes it the only centre that treats HE-PRFs in this area. Accordingly, this study presents a 12-year experience of pelvic trauma from a large European trauma centre. Data for our registry were collected and documented by five dedicated trauma nurses. Previously, the validation process of the HTR for diagnosis and procedural coding of patients with multiple trauma has shown excellent results with regard to accuracy and coverage, thus reflecting the high quality of the data [15].