Division of Colorectal Surgery, Department of Surgery, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107, USA.
J Surg Res. 2013 Sep;184(1):115-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jss.2013.05.039. Epub 2013 Jun 22.
The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status classification and Charlson comorbidity index (CCI) was adopted to assess patients' physical condition before surgery. Studies suggest that ASA score and CCI might be a prognostic criterion (indicator) for patient outcome. The aim of this study is to determine if ASA classification and CCI can determine the risk of anastomotic leaks (AL) in patients who underwent colorectal surgery.
A retrospective analysis of 505 consecutive colorectal resections with primary anastomoses between 2008 and 2012 was performed at a university hospital. ASA score, CCI, surgical procedure, length of stay, age, body mass index (BMI), comorbidities, and postoperative outcomes were analyzed.
Two hundred sixty-five patients had an ASA score of I and II, 227 patients had an ASA score of III, and 13 patients had an ASA score of IV. A total of 19 patients had an anastomotic leak (ASA I-II: 5 patients, 1.9%; ASA III: 12 patients, 5.58%; ASA IV: 2 patients, 18.18%). A higher ASA score was significantly associated with AL on further analysis (OR: 2.99, 95% CI: 1.345-6.670, P = 0.007). When matched for age, BMI, and CCI on logistic regression analysis, increased ASA level was independently related to an increased likelihood of leak (OR(steroids) = 14.35, P < 0.01; OR(ASA_III v I-II) = 2.02, P = 0.18; OR(ASA_IVvI-II) = 8.45, P = 0.03). There were no statistically significant differences in means between the leak and no-leak patients with respect to age (60.69 versus 65.43, P = 0.17), BMI (28.03 versus 28.96, P = 0.46), and CCI (6.19 versus 7.58, P = 0.09).
ASA score, but not CCI, is independently associated with anastomotic leak. Patients with a high ASA class should be closely followed postoperatively for AL after colorectal operations.
美国麻醉师协会(ASA)身体状况分类和 Charlson 合并症指数(CCI)用于评估手术前患者的身体状况。研究表明,ASA 评分和 CCI 可能是患者预后的预测指标。本研究旨在确定 ASA 分级和 CCI 是否可确定行结直肠手术患者吻合口漏(AL)的风险。
对 2008 年至 2012 年在一所大学医院接受原发性吻合术的 505 例连续行结直肠切除术的患者进行回顾性分析。分析了 ASA 评分、CCI、手术方式、住院时间、年龄、体重指数(BMI)、合并症和术后结果。
265 例患者的 ASA 评分为 I 和 II,227 例患者的 ASA 评分为 III,13 例患者的 ASA 评分为 IV。共有 19 例患者发生吻合口漏(ASA I-II:5 例,1.9%;ASA III:12 例,5.58%;ASA IV:2 例,18.18%)。进一步分析显示,ASA 评分较高与 AL 显著相关(OR:2.99,95%CI:1.345-6.670,P = 0.007)。在 logistic 回归分析中,当按年龄、BMI 和 CCI 进行匹配时,ASA 水平升高与发生漏的可能性增加独立相关(OR(类固醇)= 14.35,P < 0.01;OR(ASA_III v I-II)= 2.02,P = 0.18;OR(ASA_IV v I-II)= 8.45,P = 0.03)。在年龄(60.69 与 65.43,P = 0.17)、BMI(28.03 与 28.96,P = 0.46)和 CCI(6.19 与 7.58,P = 0.09)方面,漏口与无漏口患者之间无统计学意义的均值差异。
ASA 评分与吻合口漏独立相关,但 CCI 则不然。ASA 分级较高的患者在接受结直肠手术后应密切监测 AL。