Department of Surgery, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA.
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA.
Ann Surg. 2021 Jun 1;273(6):e247-e254. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000003357.
To evaluate meaningful, patient-centered outcomes including alive-at-home status and patient-reported quality of life 1 year after cardiac surgery.
Long-term patient-reported quality of life after cardiac surgery is not well understood. Current operative risk models and quality metrics focus on short-term outcomes.
In this combined retrospective/prospective study, cardiac surgery patients at an academic institution (2014-2015) were followed to obtain vital status, living location, and patient-reported outcomes (PROs) at 1 year using the NIH Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS). We assessed the impact of cardiac surgery, discharge location, and Society of Thoracic Surgeons perioperative predicted risk of morbidity or mortality on 1-year outcomes.
A total of 782 patients were enrolled; 84.1% (658/782) were alive-at-home at 1 year. One-year PROMIS scores were global physical health (GPH) = 48.8 ± 10.2, global mental health (GMH) = 51.2 ± 9.6, and physical functioning (PF) = 45.5 ± 10.2 (general population reference = 50 ± 10). All 3 PROMIS domains at 1 year were significantly higher compared with preoperative scores (GPH: 41.7 ± 8.5, GMH: 46.9 ± 7.9, PF: 39.6 ± 9.0; all P < 0.001). Eighty-two percent of patients discharged to a facility were alive-at-home at 1 year. These patients, however, had significantly lower 1-year scores (difference: GPH = -5.1, GMH = -5.1, PF = -7.9; all P < 0.001). Higher Society of Thoracic Surgeons perioperative predicted risk was associated with significantly lower PRO at 1 year (P < 0.001).
Cardiac surgery results in improved PROMIS scores at 1 year, whereas discharge to a facility and increasing perioperative risk correlate with worse long-term PRO. One-year alive-at-home status and 1-year PRO are meaningful, patient-centered metrics that help define long-term quality and the benefit of cardiac surgery.
评估有意义的、以患者为中心的结果,包括心脏手术后 1 年的在家生存状态和患者报告的生活质量。
心脏手术后患者长期的生活质量报告仍不明确。目前的手术风险模型和质量指标主要关注短期结果。
在这项回顾性/前瞻性研究中,对一家学术机构的心脏手术患者(2014-2015 年)进行随访,使用 NIH 患者报告的测量信息系统(PROMIS)在 1 年内获得生存状态、居住地点和患者报告的结果(PRO)。我们评估了心脏手术、出院地点以及胸外科协会围手术期预测的发病率或死亡率对 1 年结局的影响。
共纳入 782 例患者,84.1%(658/782)在 1 年时在家中生存。1 年时的 PROMIS 评分分别为:一般健康的身体机能(GPH)=48.8±10.2、一般健康的心理机能(GMH)=51.2±9.6 和身体机能(PF)=45.5±10.2(一般人群参考值=50±10)。所有 3 个 PROMIS 域在 1 年时均显著高于术前评分(GPH:41.7±8.5、GMH:46.9±7.9、PF:39.6±9.0;均 P<0.001)。出院到医疗机构的 82%患者在 1 年时在家中生存。然而,这些患者的 1 年评分明显较低(差异:GPH=-5.1、GMH=-5.1、PF=-7.9;均 P<0.001)。胸外科协会围手术期预测风险较高与 1 年时 PRO 显著降低相关(P<0.001)。
心脏手术后患者的 PROMIS 评分在 1 年内得到改善,而出院到医疗机构和围手术期风险增加与长期 PRO 恶化相关。1 年时在家生存状态和 1 年时的 PRO 是有意义的、以患者为中心的指标,有助于确定长期质量和心脏手术的获益。