Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Ann Surg. 2012 Mar;255(3):551-5. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0b013e318246c294.
The purpose of this study was to examine the incidence of complications of breast cancer surgery in a multi-institutional, prospective, validated database and to identify preoperative risk factors that predispose to these complications.
There is an increased emphasis on clinical outcomes to improve the quality of surgical care. Although mastectomy and breast conserving surgery have low risk for complications, few US studies have examined the incidence of these complications in large, multicenter patient populations. The broad scale of the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) data set facilitates multivariate analysis of patient characteristics that predispose to development of postoperative complications in breast cancer surgery.
A prospective, multi-institutional study of patients undergoing mastectomy and breast conserving surgery was performed from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program from 2005 to 2007. Study subjects were selected as a random sample of patients at more than 200 participating community and academic medical centers. Thirty-day morbidity was prospectively collected and the incidence of postoperative complications was determined, with particular emphasis on superficial and deep surgical site infections. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to identify independent risk factors for postoperative wound infections in each.
A total of 26,988 patients were identified who underwent mastectomy (N = 10,471) and breast conserving surgery (N = 16,517). As expected, the overall 30-day morbidity rate for all procedures was low (5.6%), with significantly higher morbidity for mastectomies (4.0%) than breast conserving surgery (1.6%, P < 0.001). The most common complications in all procedures were superficial surgical site infections and deep surgical site infections. Independent risk factors for development of any wound infection in patients undergoing mastectomy were a high body mass index, smoking, and diabetes (ORs = 1.8, 1.6, 1.8). In patients who had a lumpectomy, a high body mass index, smoking, and a history of surgery within 90 days prior to this procedure (ORs = 1.7, 1.9, 2.0) were independent risk factors.
Although complication rates in breast cancer surgery are low, wound infections remain the most common complication. A high body mass index and current tobacco use were the only independent risk factors for development of a postoperative wound infection across all procedures. This study highlights the benefit of a multi-institutional database in assessing risk factors for adverse outcomes in breast cancer surgery.
本研究旨在检查多机构、前瞻性、验证性数据库中乳腺癌手术并发症的发生率,并确定导致这些并发症的术前危险因素。
人们越来越强调临床结果,以提高手术护理质量。虽然乳房切除术和保乳手术的并发症风险较低,但很少有美国研究在大型多中心患者人群中检查这些并发症的发生率。国家外科质量改进计划 (NSQIP) 数据集的广泛范围便于对导致乳腺癌手术术后并发症发生的患者特征进行多变量分析。
对 2005 年至 2007 年期间来自国家外科质量改进计划的接受乳房切除术和保乳手术的患者进行了一项前瞻性、多机构研究。研究对象是在 200 多个参与社区和学术医疗中心的患者中随机抽取的。前瞻性收集 30 天发病率,并确定术后并发症的发生率,特别强调浅表和深部手术部位感染。进行多变量逻辑回归以确定每个部位术后伤口感染的独立危险因素。
共确定了 26988 例接受乳房切除术(N=10471)和保乳手术(N=16517)的患者。不出所料,所有手术的 30 天总发病率都很低(5.6%),乳房切除术(4.0%)的发病率明显高于保乳手术(1.6%,P<0.001)。所有手术中最常见的并发症是浅表手术部位感染和深部手术部位感染。接受乳房切除术的患者发生任何伤口感染的独立危险因素是高体重指数、吸烟和糖尿病(OR=1.8、1.6、1.8)。在接受乳房肿块切除术的患者中,高体重指数、吸烟和该手术前 90 天内的手术史(OR=1.7、1.9、2.0)是独立的危险因素。
尽管乳腺癌手术的并发症发生率较低,但伤口感染仍然是最常见的并发症。高体重指数和当前吸烟是所有手术中发生术后伤口感染的唯一独立危险因素。本研究强调了多机构数据库在评估乳腺癌手术不良结局危险因素方面的优势。