Cooper Zara, Scott John W, Rosenthal Ronnie A, Mitchell Susan L
Department of Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Center for Surgery and Public Health, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2015 Dec;63(12):2563-2571. doi: 10.1111/jgs.13818. Epub 2015 Nov 23.
To systematically review the current literature on mortality and functional outcomes after emergency major abdominal surgery in older adults.
Systematic literature search and standardized data collection of primary research publications from January 1994 through December 2013 on mortality or functional outcome in adults aged 65 and older after emergency major abdominal surgery using PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, Cochrane, and CINAHL. Bibliographies of relevant reports were also hand-searched to identify all potentially eligible studies.
Systematic review of retrospective and cohort studies using Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses, Meta-analysis Of Observational Studies in Epidemiology, Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology, and A Measurement Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews guidelines.
Older adults.
Articles were assessed using a standardized quality scoring system based on study design, measurement of exposures, measurement of outcomes, and control for confounding.
Of 1,459 articles screened, 93 underwent full-text review, and 20 were systematically reviewed. In-hospital and 30-day mortality of all older adults exceeded 15% in 14 of 16 studies, where reported. Older adults undergoing emergency major abdominal surgery consistently had higher mortality across study settings and procedure types than younger individuals undergoing emergency procedures and older adults undergoing elective procedures. In studies that stratified older adults, odds of death increased with age. None of these studies examined postoperative functional status, which precluded including functional outcomes in this review. Differences in exposures, outcomes, and data presented in the studies did not allow for quantification of association using metaanalysis.
Age independently predicts mortality after emergency major abdominal surgery. Data on changes in functional status of older adults who undergo these procedures are lacking.
系统回顾有关老年患者急诊腹部大手术后死亡率和功能转归的当前文献。
利用PubMed、EMBASE、科学引文索引、Cochrane和护理学与健康领域数据库,对1994年1月至2013年12月发表的关于65岁及以上成人急诊腹部大手术后死亡率或功能转归的原始研究出版物进行系统文献检索和标准化数据收集。还手工检索了相关报告的参考文献,以确定所有可能符合条件的研究。
采用系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目、流行病学观察性研究的Meta分析、加强流行病学观察性研究报告以及评估系统评价的测量工具指南,对回顾性研究和队列研究进行系统评价。
老年患者。
根据研究设计、暴露测量、结果测量和混杂因素控制,使用标准化质量评分系统对文章进行评估。
在筛选的1459篇文章中,93篇进行了全文审阅,20篇进行了系统评价。在报告的16项研究中的14项中,所有老年患者的住院死亡率和30天死亡率均超过15%。在各种研究环境和手术类型中,接受急诊腹部大手术的老年患者的死亡率始终高于接受急诊手术的年轻患者和接受择期手术的老年患者。在对老年患者进行分层的研究中,死亡几率随年龄增加而升高。这些研究均未检查术后功能状态,因此无法在本综述中纳入功能转归情况。研究中呈现的暴露、结果和数据差异不允许使用Meta分析对关联进行量化。
年龄是急诊腹部大手术后死亡率的独立预测因素。缺乏接受这些手术的老年患者功能状态变化的数据。