External validation of the REDUCTION clinical decision aids for ruling out fractures in patients with midfacial and mandibular injuries in the emergency department: a protocol for a prospective multi-centre cohort study
Pieter Date van der Zaag, Romke Rozema, Inge H. F. Reininga, Baucke van Minnen

TL;DR
This study aims to validate clinical decision tools that could reduce unnecessary CT scans for facial and jaw injuries in emergency departments.
Contribution
The study introduces and externally validates clinical decision aids to safely rule out fractures and reduce CT use in facial injury cases.
Findings
The diagnostic accuracy of the decision aids will be evaluated using sensitivity, specificity, and negative predictive value.
The study will determine if the aids can safely reduce unnecessary CT scans in patients with midfacial or mandibular injuries.
Abstract
Computed Tomography (CT) is the gold standard for diagnosing midfacial and mandibular fractures in emergency department (ED) patients. However, its increasing availability has led to more frequent use, resulting in higher healthcare costs and unnecessary radiation exposure. Although various clinical parameters can assist in diagnosis of maxillofacial fractures, none are reliable enough to rule them out individually. To support clinical decision-making, and to reduce unnecessary imaging, the REDUCTION studies developed four decision aids based on combinations of clinical parameters. The aim is to rule out: (I) midfacial fractures, (II) midfacial fractures requiring active treatment, (III) mandibular fractures, and (IV) mandibular fractures requiring active treatment. Before being implemented, these aids must undergo external validation. A prospective multi-centre validation study will…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFacial Trauma and Fracture Management · Dental Radiography and Imaging · Traumatic Ocular and Foreign Body Injuries
