From the Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative Medicine and Intensive Care Medicine, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria.
Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Medical University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria.
Anesth Analg. 2021 Sep 1;133(3):755-764. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000005638.
An increasing body of evidence demonstrates an association between obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and adverse perioperative outcomes. However, large-scale data on open colectomies are lacking. Moreover, the interaction of obesity with OSA is unknown. This study examines the impact of OSA, obesity, or a combination of both, on perioperative complications in patients undergoing open colectomy. We hypothesized that while both obesity and OSA individually increase the likelihood for perioperative complications, the overlap of the 2 conditions is associated with the highest risk.
Patients undergoing open colectomies were identified using the national Premier Healthcare claims-based Database (2006-2016; n = 340,047). Multilevel multivariable models and relative excess risk due to interaction (RERI) analysis quantified the impact of OSA, obesity, or both on length and cost of hospitalization, respiratory and cardiac complications, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, mechanical ventilation, and inhospital mortality.
Nine thousand twenty-eight (2.7%) patients had both OSA and obesity diagnoses; 10,137 (3.0%) had OSA without obesity; and 33,692 (9.9%) had obesity without OSA. Although there were overlapping confidence intervals in the binary outcomes, the risk increase was found highest for OSA with obesity, intermediate for obesity without OSA, and lowest for OSA without obesity. The strongest effects were seen for respiratory complications: odds ratio (OR), 2.41 (2.28-2.56), OR, 1.40 (1.31-1.49), and OR, 1.50 (1.45-1.56), for OSA with obesity, OSA without obesity, and obesity without OSA, respectively (all P < .0001). RERI analysis revealed a supraadditive effect of 0.51 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.34-0.68) for respiratory complications, 0.11 (-0.04 to 0.26) for cardiac complications, 0.30 (0.14-0.45) for ICU utilization, 0.34 (0.21-0.47) for mechanical ventilation utilization, and 0.26 (0.15-0.37) for mortality in patients with both OSA and obesity, compared to the sum of the conditions' individual risks. Inhospital mortality was significantly higher in patients with both OSA and obesity (OR [CI], 1.21 [1.07-1.38]) but not in the other groups.
Both OSA and obesity are individually associated with adverse perioperative outcomes, with a supraadditive effect if both OSA and obesity are present. Interventions, screening, and perioperative precautionary measures should be tailored to the respective risk profile. Moreover, both conditions appear to be underreported compared to the general population, highlighting the need for stringent perioperative screening, documentation, and reporting.
越来越多的证据表明阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)与围手术期不良结局之间存在关联。然而,缺乏关于开放性结肠切除术的大规模数据。此外,肥胖与 OSA 的相互作用尚不清楚。本研究检查了 OSA、肥胖或两者同时存在对接受开放性结肠切除术患者围手术期并发症的影响。我们假设,虽然肥胖和 OSA 单独增加围手术期并发症的可能性,但两者的重叠与最高风险相关。
使用全国 Premier Healthcare 基于索赔的数据库(2006-2016 年;n=340,047)确定接受开放性结肠切除术的患者。多层次多变量模型和交互的相对超额风险(RERI)分析量化了 OSA、肥胖或两者对住院时间和费用、呼吸和心脏并发症、重症监护病房(ICU)入院、机械通气和住院死亡率的影响。
9028 例(2.7%)患者同时患有 OSA 和肥胖症诊断;10,137 例(3.0%)患有 OSA 但无肥胖症;33,692 例(9.9%)患有肥胖症但无 OSA。虽然二进制结果的置信区间有重叠,但 OSA 伴肥胖的风险增加最高,肥胖伴 OSA 风险增加中等,OSA 不伴肥胖的风险增加最低。对于呼吸并发症,影响最大:比值比(OR),2.41(2.28-2.56)、OR,1.40(1.31-1.49)和 OR,1.50(1.45-1.56),分别为 OSA 伴肥胖、OSA 不伴肥胖和肥胖不伴 OSA(均 P<0.0001)。RERI 分析显示,呼吸并发症的超相加效应为 0.51(95%置信区间 [CI],0.34-0.68)、心脏并发症的 0.11(-0.04 至 0.26)、ICU 利用的 0.30(0.14-0.45)、机械通气利用的 0.34(0.21-0.47)以及 OSA 和肥胖症患者的死亡率为 0.26(0.15-0.37),与两种情况的个体风险之和相比。患有 OSA 和肥胖症的患者住院死亡率显著更高(OR [CI],1.21 [1.07-1.38]),但其他组并非如此。
OSA 和肥胖症均与围手术期不良结局相关,如果同时存在 OSA 和肥胖症,则会产生超相加效应。干预、筛查和围手术期预防措施应根据各自的风险状况进行调整。此外,与一般人群相比,这两种情况似乎都被低估了,这突出了需要严格的围手术期筛查、记录和报告。