Outcomes of hospital-acquired pressure injuries and present-on-admission pressure injuries: A propensity score matching analysis

J Tissue Viability. 2023 Nov;32(4):590-595. doi: 10.1016/j.jtv.2023.08.001. Epub 2023 Aug 6.

Abstract

Background: Pressure injuries (PIs) continue to present significant challenges. In recent years, the number of patients with present-on-admission pressure injury (POA-PI) has increased, but researchers have devoted little attention to it, and little is known about its clinical outcome.

Aims: To compare the clinical outcomes of POA-PI and hospital-acquired pressure injury (HAPI) patients.

Methods: In this study, hospitalized patients with pressure injuries were divided into two groups based on whether they acquired the injury in the hospital or already present at the time of their admission. The disease prognosis, duration of stay, and healthcare costs of patients with HAPI and POA-PI were evaluated using propensity score matching analysis (PSM), t-tests, and Mann-Whitney U tests.

Results: The information on 1871 patients was retrieved from the electronic case system retroactively. A total of 305 pairs of patients were effectively matched between the two groups using propensity score matching (HAPI group = 305, POA-PI group = 305). There was no statistically significant difference at characteristics between the two groups (P > 0.05). The percentage of POA-PI group patients who were discharged from the hospital was greater than that of the HAPI group (P < 0.05). Conversely, the percentage of POA-PI group patients who died, ceased receiving treatment, or transferred to the hospital was lower than that of the HAPI group. Patients in the POA-PI group had shorter hospital stays than those in the HAPI group (P < 0.05). Patients in the POA-PI group had lower healthcare costs than those in the HAPI group (P < 0.05).

Conclusions: Patients with POA-PI have superior clinical outcomes than patients with HAPI, but make up the overwhelming majority of hospitalized patients. It is imperative that future research focuses on the reduction of POA-PI and HAPI incidence and the identification of therapies that will enhance patient prevention for these conditions.

Keywords: Clinical outcome; Hospital-acquired pressure injury; Present-on-admission pressure injury; Propensity score matching.

MeSH terms

  • Hospitalization
  • Hospitals
  • Humans
  • Length of Stay
  • Pressure Ulcer* / prevention & control
  • Propensity Score