Strategic management of acute burn: implications for long-term scarring

The outcome after a burn injury can be judged against objective measures such as mortality. However, in practice, burn outcome is measured against morbidity factors with the long-term outcome relating to the ongoing issues that patients take with them for the rest of their lives. The major form of morbidity, both physical and psychological, relates to the severity and extent of scarring that remains once the scar maturation process is complete.


Introduction
The outcome after a burn injury can be judged against objective measures such as mortality.
However, in practice, burn outcome is measured against morbidity factors with the long-term outcome relating to the ongoing issues that patients take with them for the rest of their lives.
The major form of morbidity, both physical and psychological, relates to the severity and extent of scarring that remains once the scar maturation process is complete.
The long-term severity of scarring is related to several factors: the severity of the initial injury, the effectiveness of first aid and the acute management of the burn and secondary reconstructive options.
It is therefore the quality of the scarring that determines a patients' long-term outcome. Our research confirms that the quality of scarring can be predicted by the healing time and that the outcome of scarring can be improved by better acute burn management.

Healing time
In 2006 we provided data from a large cohort of children with a scald injury, mapping their healing time to scar outcomes. 1 Although it was a retrospective study, it demonstrated a clear link between hypertrophic scarring and prolonged healing times (Figure 1). We demonstrated this link in both patients treated conservatively and those who underwent split skin grafting. Patients who had split skin grafts and healed early fared better than those who had late grafting.
However, patients who underwent a skin graft, even if performed earlier, had more scarring than those who healed quickly without a graft.

What determines the healing time?
Factors such as the depth of injury are primarily determined by the severity of the injury itself but there is good evidence that timely and effective first aid can stop the 'cooking' effect and potentially save some of the tissue in the zone of injury. The depth of the dermal injury determines the number of adnexal elements that remain viablethese include hair follicles and glands and are important because they provide epidermal cells that can migrate onto the surface and heal the wound.
The more superficial the injury, the more adnexal elements remain, the more quickly the wound heals and the better the outcome. If the dermis is damaged at a deeper level, then the outcome is worse due to slow re-epithelisation and issues such as contraction can also become a problem. The Other factors such as medical comorbidities, nutrition and smoking may also prolong healing and these too can be managed to reduce overall healing time.
As surgeons we either strive to preserve viable dermis and provide the best wound environment possible to facilitate re-epithelialisation or decide early to excise and replace the epidermis and dermis if required.

Strategic planning
The strategic plan that we have developed aims to reflect our understanding of the scarring process, to keep healing times as short as possible and to actively treat those at high risk of aggressive scarring. It incorporates the following elements:

Post-healing protocol
After the patient has healed they are placed into one of three groups: if fully healed by 14 days, the patient is discharged from the dressing clinic with an advice sheet; if healed between 14 and 21 days, the patient is discharged with information and advice to return if any scarring appears (there is no routine follow-up but easy access to the clinic if required); if it takes more than 21 days to heal, or grafting was needed, patients are pre-treated with active scar therapy including prophylactic pressure garments in most cases. They are then actively followed up in outpatient clinics.

Does it work?
After revising our approach since the 2006 study, 1 we reviewed a further group of children. 3 Lower overall rate of hypertrophic scarring was seen and, for corresponding healing times after injury, hypertrophic scarring rates were halved in comparison to the 2006 cohort. We have demonstrated that the use of a structured approach for paediatric burns has improved outcomes with regards to healing times and hypertrophic scarring rate. This approach allows maximisation of healing potential and uses aggressive prophylactic measures.

Conclusion
Early decision-making and good strategic management of acute burns can improve the long-term outcome. Although our study groups comprised less complex paediatric cases, we apply the same principles in managing adult patients.
Elderly patients do not produce hypertrophic scars with delayed healing so accordingly there is no indication to prioritise excisions for this group.