Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, Groote Schuur Hospital, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
Department of Surgery, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
Lancet. 2018 Apr 21;391(10130):1589-1598. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(18)30001-1. Epub 2018 Jan 3.
There is a need to increase access to surgical treatments in African countries, but perioperative complications represent a major global health-care burden. There are few studies describing surgical outcomes in Africa.
We did a 7-day, international, prospective, observational cohort study of patients aged 18 years and older undergoing any inpatient surgery in 25 countries in Africa (the African Surgical Outcomes Study). We aimed to recruit as many hospitals as possible using a convenience sampling survey, and required data from at least ten hospitals per country (or half the surgical centres if there were fewer than ten hospitals) and data for at least 90% of eligible patients from each site. Each country selected one recruitment week between February and May, 2016. The primary outcome was in-hospital postoperative complications, assessed according to predefined criteria and graded as mild, moderate, or severe. Data were presented as median (IQR), mean (SD), or n (%), and compared using t tests. This study is registered on the South African National Health Research Database (KZ_2015RP7_22) and ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03044899).
We recruited 11 422 patients (median 29 [IQR 10-70]) from 247 hospitals during the national cohort weeks. Hospitals served a median population of 810 000 people (IQR 200 000-2 000 000), with a combined number of specialist surgeons, obstetricians, and anaesthetists totalling 0·7 (0·2-1·9) per 100 000 population. Hospitals did a median of 212 (IQR 65-578) surgical procedures per 100 000 population each year. Patients were younger (mean age 38·5 years [SD 16·1]), with a lower risk profile (American Society of Anesthesiologists median score 1 [IQR 1-2]) than reported in high-income countries. 1253 (11%) patients were infected with HIV, 6504 procedures (57%) were urgent or emergent, and the most common procedure was caesarean delivery (3792 patients, 33%). Postoperative complications occurred in 1977 (18·2%, 95% CI 17·4-18·9]) of 10 885 patients. 239 (2·1%) of 11 193 patients died, 225 (94·1%) after the day of surgery. Infection was the most common complication (1156 [10·2%] of 10 970 patients), of whom 112 (9·7%) died.
Despite a low-risk profile and few postoperative complications, patients in Africa were twice as likely to die after surgery when compared with the global average for postoperative deaths. Initiatives to increase access to surgical treatments in Africa therefore should be coupled with improved surveillance for deteriorating physiology in patients who develop postoperative complications, and the resources necessary to achieve this objective.
Medical Research Council of South Africa.
需要增加非洲国家获得外科治疗的机会,但围手术期并发症是全球卫生保健的主要负担。关于非洲的外科手术结果的研究很少。
我们在非洲的 25 个国家进行了为期 7 天的国际前瞻性观察性队列研究,纳入了 18 岁及以上接受任何住院手术的患者(非洲外科手术研究)。我们使用便利抽样调查的方法尽可能多地招募医院,每个国家在 2016 年 2 月至 5 月期间选择一个招募周,要求每个国家至少有 10 家医院的数据(如果医院少于 10 家,则要求一半的手术中心的数据),并且每个地点至少有 90%的合格患者的数据。我们的主要结局是院内术后并发症,根据预先确定的标准进行评估,并分为轻度、中度或重度。数据以中位数(IQR)、均值(SD)或 n(%)表示,并使用 t 检验进行比较。本研究在南非国家健康研究数据库(KZ_2015RP7_22)和临床试验.gov(NCT03044899)注册。
在全国性的队列周期间,我们从 247 家医院招募了 11422 名患者(中位数为 29 [IQR 10-70])。医院服务的中位数人口为 810 万(IQR 200 万-2000 万),每 10 万人中专门的外科医生、产科医生和麻醉师总数为 0.7(0.2-1.9)。医院每年中位数进行 212 次(IQR 65-578)手术。患者更年轻(平均年龄 38.5 岁[SD 16.1]),风险状况较低(美国麻醉医师协会评分中位数为 1 [IQR 1-2]),这与高收入国家的报道不同。1253 名(11%)患者感染了艾滋病毒,6504 例(57%)为紧急或紧急手术,最常见的手术是剖宫产(3792 例,33%)。10885 例患者中有 1977 例(18.2%,95%CI 17.4-18.9)发生术后并发症。239 名(11193 名患者的 2.1%)患者死亡,其中 225 名(94.1%)在手术后死亡。感染是最常见的并发症(10970 例患者中有 1156 例[10.2%]),其中 112 例(9.7%)死亡。
尽管患者的风险状况较低,术后并发症也较少,但与全球术后死亡平均水平相比,非洲患者术后死亡的可能性是其两倍。因此,在非洲增加获得外科治疗的机会的举措,应该与改善对术后出现并发症的患者生理恶化的监测以及实现这一目标所需的资源相结合。
南非医学研究理事会。