Copeland Laurel A, Sako Edward Y, Zeber John E, Pugh Mary Jo, Wang Chen-Pin, MacCarthy Andrea A, Restrepo Marcos I, Mortensen Eric M, Lawrence Valerie A
Center for Applied Health Research, Central Texas Veterans Health Care System, with Baylor Scott & White Health, Temple, TX, USA; Department of Medicine, Texas A&M Health Science Center, and School of Rural Public Health, Bryan/College Station, TX, USA.
South Texas Veterans Health Care System, San Antonio, TX, USA; UT Health Science Center at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX, USA.
Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2014 Sep-Oct;36(5):502-8. doi: 10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2014.04.003. Epub 2014 May 23.
To estimate 1-year mortality risk associated with preoperative serious mental illness (SMI) as defined by the Veterans Health Administration (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD], major depression) following nonambulatory cardiac or vascular surgical procedures compared to patients without SMI. Cardiac/vascular operations were selected because patients with SMI are known to be at elevated risk of cardiovascular disease.
Retrospective analysis of system-wide data from electronic medical records of patients undergoing nonambulatory surgery (inpatient or day-of-surgery admission) October 2005-September 2009 with 1-year follow-up (N=55,864; 99% male; <30 days of postoperative hospitalization). Death was hypothesized to be more common among patients with preoperative SMI.
One in nine patients had SMI, mostly PTSD (6%). One-year mortality varied by procedure type and SMI status. Patients had vascular operations (64%; 23% died), coronary artery bypass graft (26%; 10% died) or other cardiac operations (11%; 15%-18% died). Fourteen percent of patients with PTSD died, 20% without SMI and 24% with schizophrenia, with other groups intermediate. In multivariable stratified models, SMI was associated with increased mortality only for patients with bipolar disorder following cardiac operations. Bipolar disorder and PTSD were negatively associated with death following vascular operations.
SMI is not consistently associated with postoperative mortality in covariate-adjusted analyses.
评估退伍军人健康管理局定义的术前严重精神疾病(SMI,即精神分裂症、双相情感障碍、创伤后应激障碍[PTSD]、重度抑郁症)患者在非门诊心脏或血管外科手术后1年的死亡风险,并与无SMI的患者进行比较。选择心脏/血管手术是因为已知SMI患者患心血管疾病的风险较高。
对2005年10月至2009年9月接受非门诊手术(住院或手术当日入院)且有1年随访的患者电子病历系统数据进行回顾性分析(N = 55,864;99%为男性;术后住院时间<30天)。假设术前有SMI的患者死亡更为常见。
九分之一的患者患有SMI,其中大多为PTSD(6%)。1年死亡率因手术类型和SMI状态而异。患者接受血管手术(64%;23%死亡)、冠状动脉搭桥术(26%;10%死亡)或其他心脏手术(11%;15%-18%死亡)。PTSD患者中有14%死亡,无SMI患者为20%,精神分裂症患者为24%,其他组介于两者之间。在多变量分层模型中,仅在心脏手术后,SMI与双相情感障碍患者死亡率增加相关。双相情感障碍和PTSD与血管手术后死亡呈负相关。
在协变量调整分析中,SMI与术后死亡率并非始终相关。