Suppr超能文献

非洲女性外科护理的术后结局:前瞻性观察队列的国际风险调整分析

Postoperative outcomes associated with surgical care for women in Africa: an international risk-adjusted analysis of prospective observational cohorts.

作者信息

Paterson Amy, Maswime Salome, Hardy Anneli, Pearse Rupert M, Biccard Bruce M

机构信息

Global Surgery Division, Department of Surgery, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.

Global Surgery Group, Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.

出版信息

BJA Open. 2022 Oct 21;4:100100. doi: 10.1016/j.bjao.2022.100100. eCollection 2022 Dec.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Improving women's health is a critical component of the sustainable development goals. Although obstetric outcomes in Africa have received significant focus, non-obstetric surgical outcomes for women in Africa remain under-examined.

METHODS

We did a secondary analysis of the African Surgical Outcomes Study (ASOS) and International Surgical Outcomes Study (ISOS), two 7-day prospective observational cohort studies of outcomes after adult inpatient surgery. This sub-study focuses specifically on the analysis of the female, elective, non-obstetric, non-gynaecological surgical data collected during these two large multicentre studies. The African data from both cohorts are compared with international (non-African) outcomes in a risk-adjusted logistic regression analysis using a generalised linear mixed-effects model. The primary outcome was severe postoperative complications including in-hospital mortality in Africa compared with non-African outcomes.

RESULTS

A total of 1698 African participants and 18 449 international participants met the inclusion criteria. The African cohort were younger than the international cohort with a lower preoperative risk profile. Severe complications occurred in 48 (2.9%) of 1671, and 431 (2.3%) of 18 449 patients in the African and international cohorts, respectively, with in-hospital mortality after severe complications of 23/48 (47.9%) in Africa and 78/431 (18.1%) internationally. Women in Africa had an adjusted odds ratio of 2.06 (95% confidence interval, 1.17-3.62; =0.012) of developing a severe postoperative complication after elective non-obstetric, non-gynaecological surgery, compared with the international cohort.

CONCLUSIONS

Women in Africa have double the risk adjusted odds of severe postoperative complications (including in-hospital mortality) after elective non-obstetric, non-gynaecological surgery compared with the international incidence.

摘要

背景

改善妇女健康是可持续发展目标的关键组成部分。尽管非洲的产科结局受到了广泛关注,但非洲女性的非产科手术结局仍未得到充分研究。

方法

我们对非洲外科手术结局研究(ASOS)和国际外科手术结局研究(ISOS)进行了二次分析,这两项研究均为对成年住院患者手术后结局进行的为期7天的前瞻性观察队列研究。本亚研究特别关注对这两项大型多中心研究中收集的女性、择期、非产科、非妇科手术数据的分析。使用广义线性混合效应模型,在风险调整的逻辑回归分析中将两个队列中的非洲数据与国际(非非洲)结局进行比较。主要结局是与非非洲结局相比,非洲地区术后严重并发症,包括住院死亡率。

结果

共有1698名非洲参与者和18449名国际参与者符合纳入标准。非洲队列比国际队列年轻,术前风险状况较低。非洲队列和国际队列中,分别有1671名患者中的48名(2.9%)和18449名患者中的431名(2.3%)发生了严重并发症,非洲地区严重并发症后的住院死亡率为23/48(47.9%),国际上为78/431(18.1%)。与国际队列相比,非洲女性在择期非产科、非妇科手术后发生严重术后并发症的调整比值比为2.06(95%置信区间,1.17 - 3.62;P = 0.012)。

结论

与国际发病率相比,非洲女性在择期非产科、非妇科手术后发生严重术后并发症(包括住院死亡率)的风险调整比值比高出一倍。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/6e45/10430807/21f267e626fa/ga1.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验