Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, University of California Davis, 4150 V Street, Suite 3400, Sacramento, CA, 95817, USA.
Department of Statistics, University of California Davis, Davis, CA, USA.
BMC Anesthesiol. 2022 May 14;22(1):146. doi: 10.1186/s12871-022-01681-x.
Few interventions are known to reduce the incidence of respiratory failure that occurs following elective surgery (postoperative respiratory failure; PRF). We previously reported risk factors associated with PRF that occurs within the first 5 days after elective surgery (early PRF; E-PRF); however, PRF that occurs six or more days after elective surgery (late PRF; L-PRF) likely represents a different entity. We hypothesized that L-PRF would be associated with worse outcomes and different risk factors than E-PRF.
This was a retrospective matched case-control study of 59,073 consecutive adult patients admitted for elective non-cardiac and non-pulmonary surgical procedures at one of five University of California academic medical centers between October 2012 and September 2015. We identified patients with L-PRF, confirmed by surgeon and intensivist subject matter expert review, and matched them 1:1 to patients who did not develop PRF (No-PRF) based on hospital, age, and surgical procedure. We then analyzed risk factors and outcomes associated with L-PRF compared to E-PRF and No-PRF.
Among 95 patients with L-PRF, 50.5% were female, 71.6% white, 27.4% Hispanic, and 53.7% Medicare recipients; the median age was 63 years (IQR 56, 70). Compared to 95 matched patients with No-PRF and 319 patients who developed E-PRF, L-PRF was associated with higher morbidity and mortality, longer hospital and intensive care unit length of stay, and increased costs. Compared to No-PRF, factors associated with L-PRF included: preexisiting neurologic disease (OR 4.36, 95% CI 1.81-10.46), anesthesia duration per hour (OR 1.22, 95% CI 1.04-1.44), and maximum intraoperative peak inspiratory pressure per cm H0 (OR 1.14, 95% CI 1.06-1.22).
We identified that pre-existing neurologic disease, longer duration of anesthesia, and greater maximum intraoperative peak inspiratory pressures were associated with respiratory failure that developed six or more days after elective surgery in adult patients (L-PRF). Interventions targeting these factors may be worthy of future evaluation.
目前已知的干预措施很少能降低择期手术后(术后呼吸衰竭;PRF)发生的呼吸衰竭发生率。我们之前报告了与择期手术后 5 天内发生的 PRF(早期 PRF;E-PRF)相关的危险因素;然而,择期手术后 6 天或更长时间发生的 PRF(晚期 PRF;L-PRF)可能代表一种不同的实体。我们假设 L-PRF 与 E-PRF 相比,其结果更差,且危险因素也不同。
这是一项回顾性匹配病例对照研究,纳入了 2012 年 10 月至 2015 年 9 月在加利福尼亚大学五所学术医疗中心之一接受非心脏和非肺部择期手术的 59073 例连续成年患者。我们通过外科医生和重症监护专家的审查确认了发生 L-PRF 的患者,并根据医院、年龄和手术程序将他们与未发生 PRF(No-PRF)的患者进行 1:1 匹配。然后,我们分析了与 L-PRF 相关的危险因素和结果,并与 E-PRF 和 No-PRF 进行了比较。
在 95 例 L-PRF 患者中,50.5%为女性,71.6%为白人,27.4%为西班牙裔,53.7%为医疗保险受益人;中位年龄为 63 岁(IQR 56,70)。与 95 例匹配的 No-PRF 患者和 319 例发生 E-PRF 的患者相比,L-PRF 与更高的发病率和死亡率、更长的住院和重症监护病房住院时间以及更高的成本相关。与 No-PRF 相比,与 L-PRF 相关的因素包括:存在神经疾病(OR 4.36,95%CI 1.81-10.46)、每小时麻醉时间(OR 1.22,95%CI 1.04-1.44)和最大术中吸气峰压每 cmH0(OR 1.14,95%CI 1.06-1.22)。
我们发现,在成年患者中,存在神经疾病、麻醉时间延长和术中最大吸气峰压升高与择期手术后 6 天或更长时间发生的呼吸衰竭(L-PRF)有关。针对这些因素的干预措施可能值得进一步评估。