Department of Surgery, Division of Thoracic Surgery, University of Ottawa, the Ottawa Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Ann Thorac Surg. 2010 Sep;90(3):936-42; discussion 942. doi: 10.1016/j.athoracsur.2010.05.014.
Objective reporting of postoperative complications is the foundation of surgical quality assurance. We developed a system to identify both presence and severity of thoracic morbidity and mortality, and evaluated its feasibility and utility over the first two years of its implementation.
The system was based on the Clavien-Dindo classification, in which the severity of a complication is proportional to the effort to treat it. Definitions were developed by peer review and questionnaire. All patients undergoing thoracic surgery (January 2008 to December 2009) were prospectively evaluated.
A total of 953 patients (mean age 61 years; range, 14 to 95) underwent thoracic surgery (total # cases 1260), of which 369 patients had at least one complication (29.3% procedures). Grades I and II include minor complications requiring no therapy or pharmacologic intervention only. Grades III and IV are major complications that require surgical intervention or life support. Grade V complications result in patient death. Grades I, II, III, and IV complications comprised 4.9%, 63.9%, 21.1%, and 7.8% of all complications; overall mortality rate (grade V) was 2.2%. The most common complications were prolonged air leak (18.8%) and atrial fibrillation (18.2%) after pulmonary resection, and atrial fibrillation (11.5%) after esophagectomy-gastrectomy. Prolonged air leak led to a major complication (13%), readmission (17%), or prolonged hospital stay (29%) to a greater extent than atrial fibrillation (3%, 2%, and 7%, respectively).
This standardized classification system for identifying presence and severity of thoracic surgical complications is feasible, facilitates objective comparison, identifies burden of illness of individual complications, and provides an effective method for continuous surgical quality assessment.
客观报告术后并发症是手术质量保证的基础。我们开发了一种系统来识别胸外科发病率和死亡率的存在和严重程度,并在其实施的头两年内评估了其可行性和实用性。
该系统基于 Clavien-Dindo 分类,其中并发症的严重程度与治疗的难度成正比。定义是通过同行评议和问卷调查制定的。所有接受胸外科手术(2008 年 1 月至 2009 年 12 月)的患者均进行前瞻性评估。
共有 953 名患者(平均年龄 61 岁;范围为 14 至 95 岁)接受了胸外科手术(总例数 1260 例),其中 369 例患者至少有 1 种并发症(29.3%的手术)。I 级和 II 级包括仅需要治疗或药物干预的轻微并发症。III 级和 IV 级是需要手术干预或生命支持的主要并发症。V 级并发症导致患者死亡。I、II、III 和 IV 级并发症占所有并发症的 4.9%、63.9%、21.1%和 7.8%;总死亡率(V 级)为 2.2%。最常见的并发症是肺切除术后的持续性漏气(18.8%)和心房颤动(18.2%),以及食管胃切除术后的心房颤动(11.5%)。持续性漏气比心房颤动更易导致主要并发症(13%)、再次入院(17%)或延长住院时间(29%)(分别为 3%、2%和 7%)。
这种用于识别胸外科并发症的存在和严重程度的标准化分类系统是可行的,促进了客观比较,确定了单个并发症的疾病负担,并为持续的手术质量评估提供了有效的方法。