Scarborough John E, Schumacher Jessica, Pappas Theodore N, McCoy Christopher C, Englum Brian R, Agarwal Suresh K, Greenberg Caprice C
Wisconsin Surgical Outcomes Research Program, Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI.
Wisconsin Surgical Outcomes Research Program, Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI.
J Am Coll Surg. 2016 Apr;222(4):515-24. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2015.12.038. Epub 2016 Jan 14.
Because preoperative risk factor modification is generally not possible in the emergency setting, complication prevention represents an important focus for quality improvement in emergency general surgery (EGS). The objective of our study was to determine the overall impact that specific postoperative complications have in this patient population.
Our study sample consisted of patients from the 2012-2013 ACS-NSQIP database who underwent an EGS procedure. We used population attributable fractions (PAFs) to estimate the overall impact that each of 8 specific complications had on 30-day physiologic and resource use outcomes in our study population. The PAF represents the percentage reduction in a given outcome that would be anticipated if a complication were able to be completely prevented in our study population. Both unadjusted and risk-adjusted PAFs were calculated.
There were 79,183 patients included for analysis. The most common complications in these patients were bleeding (6.2%), incisional surgical site infection (SSI) (3.4%), pneumonia (2.7%), and organ/space SSI (2.6%). Bleeding was the complication with the greatest overall impact on mortality and end-organ dysfunction, demonstrating an adjusted PAF of 10.7% (95% CI 8.2%,13.1%, p < 0.001) and 15.9% (95% CI 13.9%, 16.7%, p < 0.001) for these respective outcomes. The only other complication with a sizeable impact on these outcomes was pneumonia (adjusted PAF of 7.9% for mortality and 13.2% for pneumonia). In contrast, complications such as urinary tract infection, venous thromboembolism, myocardial infarction, and incisional SSI had negligible impacts on these outcomes.
Our study provides a framework for the development of high-value quality initiatives in EGS.
由于在急诊情况下通常无法对术前危险因素进行调整,因此预防并发症是急诊普通外科(EGS)质量改进的一个重要重点。我们研究的目的是确定特定术后并发症对该患者群体的总体影响。
我们的研究样本包括2012 - 2013年美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进计划(ACS-NSQIP)数据库中接受EGS手术的患者。我们使用人群归因分数(PAF)来估计8种特定并发症中的每一种对我们研究人群30天生理和资源使用结果的总体影响。PAF代表了如果在我们的研究人群中能够完全预防一种并发症,预期给定结果会降低的百分比。计算了未调整和风险调整的PAF。
纳入分析的患者有79183例。这些患者中最常见的并发症是出血(6.2%)、手术切口部位感染(SSI)(3.4%)、肺炎(2.7%)和器官/腔隙SSI(2.6%)。出血是对死亡率和终末器官功能障碍总体影响最大的并发症,对于这些相应结果,调整后的PAF分别为10.7%(95%CI 8.2%,13.1%,p < 0.001)和15.9%(95%CI 13.9%,16.7%,p < 0.001)。对这些结果有相当大影响的唯一其他并发症是肺炎(死亡率调整后的PAF为7.9%,肺炎调整后的PAF为13.2%)。相比之下,诸如尿路感染、静脉血栓栓塞、心肌梗死和手术切口SSI等并发症对这些结果的影响可忽略不计。
我们的研究为EGS中高价值质量改进措施的制定提供了一个框架。