Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94118, USA.
Ann Surg. 2011 Dec;254(6):921-6. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0b013e3182383a78.
To determine surgical risk in nursing home residents undergoing major abdominal surgery.
Recent studies suggest that surgery can be performed safely in the very old. Surgical risk in nursing home residents is poorly understood.
We used national Medicare claims and the nursing home Minimum Data Set (1999-2006) to identify nursing home residents undergoing surgery (surgery for bleeding duodenal ulcer, cholecystectomy, appendectomy, and colectomy, n = 70,719). We compared operative mortality and use of invasive interventions (mechanical ventilation, intravascular hemodynamic monitoring, feeding tube placement, tracheostomy, and vena cava filters) among nursing home residents to rates among noninstitutionalized Medicare enrollees age 65 and older undergoing the same procedures. (n = 1,060,389). We adjusted for patient characteristics using logistic regression.
Operative mortality among nursing home residents was substantially higher than among noninstitutionalized Medicare enrollees for all procedures (surgery for bleeding duodenal ulcer, 42% versus 26%, adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 1.79; colectomy, 32% versus 13%, AOR 2.06; appendectomy, 12% versus 2%, AOR 3.27; cholecystectomy, 11% versus 3%, AOR 2.65; P < 0.001 for all comparisons). Overall, invasive interventions were more common among nursing home residents than controls (ranging from 18% and 5%, respectively, for cholecystectomy to 55% and 43%, respectively, for surgery for bleeding duodenal ulcer, P < 0.0001 for all comparisons).
Nursing home residents experience substantially higher rates of mortality and invasive interventions after major surgery than other Medicare beneficiaries that are independent of age and measured comorbidities. Our data suggest that the risks of major surgery are substantially higher in nursing home residents and this information should inform decisions of physicians and patients and their families.
确定在养老院居民中进行主要腹部手术的手术风险。
最近的研究表明,老年人可以安全地进行手术。养老院居民的手术风险了解甚少。
我们使用全国医疗保险索赔和养老院最低数据集(1999-2006 年)来确定接受手术的养老院居民(十二指肠溃疡出血手术、胆囊切除术、阑尾切除术和结肠切除术,n=70719)。我们比较了养老院居民与接受相同手术的非机构化医疗保险参保者(年龄在 65 岁及以上,n=1060389)的手术死亡率和侵袭性干预(机械通气、血管内血流动力学监测、置管喂养、气管切开术和腔静脉滤器)的使用情况。我们使用逻辑回归对患者特征进行了调整。
对于所有手术,养老院居民的手术死亡率明显高于非机构化医疗保险参保者(十二指肠溃疡出血手术为 42%,而调整后的优势比(AOR)为 1.79;结肠切除术为 32%,AOR 为 2.06;阑尾切除术为 12%,AOR 为 3.27;胆囊切除术为 11%,AOR 为 2.65;所有比较均 P<0.001)。总体而言,与对照组相比,养老院居民的侵袭性干预更为常见(从胆囊切除术的 18%和 5%,分别为 55%和 43%,分别为十二指肠溃疡出血手术,所有比较 P<0.0001)。
与其他医疗保险受益人相比,养老院居民在接受重大手术后的死亡率和侵袭性干预率要高得多,这与年龄和测量的合并症无关。我们的数据表明,养老院居民接受重大手术的风险要高得多,这些信息应告知医生、患者及其家属的决策。