Autopsy after traumatic death - A shifting paradigm

Timothy D. Light, Nora A. Royer, Joseph Zabell, Mark B. Le, Timothy A. Thomsen, Gerald P. Kealey, Michel A. Alpen, Marcus B. Nashelsky

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: The role of autopsy in evaluating missed injury after traumatic death is well established and discussed in the literature. The frequency of incidental findings in trauma patients has not been reported. We believe that incidental findings are under recognized and reported by trauma surgeons. Patients and Methods: This prospective, descriptive, cohort study was conducted at a Level 1 trauma center in a rural state. Four hundred ninety-six deaths over a 4-y period were identified from the trauma registry. Two hundred four complete autopsies were available for review. One thousand eighteen traumatic diagnoses were identified from 204 autopsies and corresponding medical records by trauma surgeons blinded to patient identity. The surgeons recorded missed diagnoses, incidental diagnoses identified at autopsy, and diagnoses known at the time of death confirmed by autopsy. Results: The surgeons had a κ-score of 0.82-0.84. Forty-two patients (21% of patients) had 68 severe missed injuries; 67 patients (33% of patients) had 94 minor missed injuries. Twenty-eight patients (14%) had significant incidental findings including premature atherosclerosis, multiple endocrine neoplasia, tuberculosis, and others. Conclusions: The autopsy after traumatic death is more than a mechanism of quality control and teaching. A high proportion of patients will have incidental findings important to family members, and have public health importance. Systems need to be developed to review autopsy results with attention to identifying and communicating incidental findings. Given the incidence of significant missed injuries and incidental findings, the autopsy continues to have an important role in health care.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)121-124
Number of pages4
JournalJournal of Surgical Research
Volume167
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2011

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was supported in part by NIH Training Grant HL007485-28 (JZ), and by University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine Summer Research Scholarship (MBL). Special thanks to Miriam Zimmerman, Ph.D. for statistical assistance.

Keywords

  • autopsy
  • death
  • incidental finding
  • missed injury
  • trauma

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