Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Anesthesia, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, California.
Critical Care and Perioperative Epidemiology Research (CAPER) Unit, Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Anesth Analg. 2021 Feb 1;132(2):512-523. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000005311.
Anesthesiologists caring for patients with do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders may have ethical concerns because of their resuscitative wishes and may have clinical concerns because of their known increased risk of morbidity/mortality. Patient heterogeneity and/or emphasis on mortality outcomes make previous studies among patients with DNR orders difficult to interpret. We sought to explore factors associated with morbidity and mortality among patients with DNR orders, which were stratified by surgical subgroups.
Exploratory retrospective cohort study in adult patients undergoing prespecified colorectal, vascular, and orthopedic surgeries was performed using the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Participant Use File data from 2010 to 2013. Among patients with preoperative DNR orders (ie, active DNR order written in the patient's chart before surgery), factors associated with 30-day mortality, increased length of stay, and inpatient death were determined via penalized regression. Unadjusted and adjusted estimates for selected variables are presented.
After selection as above, 211,420 patients underwent prespecified procedures, and of those, 2755 (1.3%) had pre-existing DNR orders and met above selection to address morbidity/mortality aims. By specialty, of these patients with a preoperative DNR, 1149 underwent colorectal, 870 vascular, and 736 orthopedic surgery. Across groups, 36.2% were male and had a mean age 79.9 years (range 21-90). The 30-day mortality was 15.4%-27.2% and median length of stay was 6-12 days. Death at discharge was 7.0%, 13.1%, and 23.0% in orthopedics, vascular, and colorectal patients with a DNR, respectively. The strongest factors associated with increased odds of 30-day mortality were preoperative septic shock in colorectal patients, preoperative ascites in vascular patients, and any requirement of mechanical ventilation at admission in orthopedic patients.
In patients with DNR orders undergoing common surgical procedures, the association of characteristics with morbidity and mortality varies in both direction and magnitude. The DNR order itself should not be the defining measure of risk.
为有“不复苏”(DNR)医嘱的患者提供治疗的麻醉师可能会因为他们复苏的愿望而产生伦理方面的顾虑,也可能会因为他们已知的发病率/死亡率增加而产生临床方面的顾虑。患者的异质性和/或对死亡率结果的强调使得之前在有 DNR 医嘱的患者中进行的研究难以解释。我们试图探讨与有 DNR 医嘱的患者的发病率和死亡率相关的因素,这些因素按手术亚组进行分层。
使用美国外科医师学会国家手术质量改进计划参与者使用文件数据,对 2010 年至 2013 年期间进行规定的结肠直肠、血管和骨科手术的成年患者进行探索性回顾性队列研究。在有术前 DNR 医嘱的患者中(即在手术前写入患者病历的主动 DNR 医嘱),通过惩罚回归确定与 30 天死亡率、住院时间延长和住院内死亡相关的因素。呈现未经调整和调整后选定变量的估计值。
按照上述选择标准,211420 名患者接受了规定的手术,其中 2755 名(1.3%)有预先存在的 DNR 医嘱,并符合上述选择以达到发病率/死亡率目标。按专业划分,这些有术前 DNR 的患者中,1149 名接受了结肠直肠手术,870 名接受了血管手术,736 名接受了骨科手术。在各个组中,36.2%为男性,平均年龄为 79.9 岁(范围 21-90 岁)。30 天死亡率为 15.4%-27.2%,中位住院时间为 6-12 天。在有 DNR 的骨科、血管和结肠直肠患者中,出院时的死亡率分别为 7.0%、13.1%和 23.0%。与 30 天死亡率增加相关的最强因素是结肠直肠患者术前脓毒症休克、血管患者术前腹水以及骨科患者入院时需要机械通气。
在接受常见手术的有 DNR 医嘱的患者中,特征与发病率和死亡率的关联在方向和程度上都有所不同。DNR 医嘱本身不应该是风险的决定性衡量标准。