Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, Virginia, USA.
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York, USA.
J Surg Oncol. 2024 Jun;129(8):1442-1448. doi: 10.1002/jso.27643. Epub 2024 Apr 29.
Expanding outpatient surgery to the increasing number of procedures and patient populations warrants continuous evaluation of postoperative outcomes to ensure the best care and safety. We describe adverse postoperative outcomes and transfer rates related to anesthesia in a large sample of patients who underwent same-day cancer surgery at a freestanding ambulatory surgery center.
Between January 2017 and June 2021, 3361 cancer surgeries, including breast and plastic, head and neck, gynecology, and urology, were performed. The surgeries were indicated for diagnosis, staging, and/or treatment. We report the incidence of transfers and adverse postoperative outcomes related to anesthesia.
Breast and plastic surgeries were the most common (1771, 53%), followed by urology (1052, 31%), gynecology (410, 12%), and head and neck surgeries (128, 4%). Based on patients' first procedure, comorbidity levels were highest for urology (75% American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status score 3, 1.7% score 4) and lowest for breast surgeries (31% score 3, 0.2% score 4). Most gynecology surgeries used general anesthesia (97.6%), whereas breast surgeries used the least (38%). A total of seven patients (0.2%; 95% CI: 0.08%-0.4%) were immediately transferred to an outside hospital; four due to anesthesia-related reasons. Only 7 (0.2%) patients needed additional postoperative care related to anesthesia-related adverse events, specifically cardiac events (4), difficult intubations (2), desaturation (1), and agitation, nausea, and headache (1).
The incidence of anesthesia-related adverse postoperative outcomes is low in cancer patients undergoing outpatient surgeries at our freestanding ambulatory surgery center. This suggests that carefully selected cancer patients, including patients with metastatic cancer, can undergo anesthesia for same-day surgery, making cancer care accessible locally and reducing stress associated with travel for treatment. More research investigating complication rates related to surgery and to cancer disease trajectory are needed to establish a complete evaluation of safety for outpatient cancer surgery.
将门诊手术扩大到越来越多的手术和患者群体,需要不断评估术后结果,以确保提供最佳的护理和安全。我们描述了在一家独立的日间手术中心接受日间癌症手术的大量患者中与麻醉相关的不良术后结果和转院率。
在 2017 年 1 月至 2021 年 6 月期间,共进行了 3361 例癌症手术,包括乳房和整形、头颈部、妇科和泌尿科手术。这些手术用于诊断、分期和/或治疗。我们报告与麻醉相关的转院和不良术后结果的发生率。
乳房和整形手术最为常见(1771 例,占 53%),其次是泌尿科(1052 例,占 31%)、妇科(410 例,占 12%)和头颈部手术(128 例,占 4%)。根据患者的第一次手术,泌尿科患者的合并症水平最高(75%的美国麻醉医师协会身体状况评分 3 分,1.7%的评分 4 分),乳房手术患者的合并症水平最低(31%的评分 3 分,0.2%的评分 4 分)。大多数妇科手术采用全身麻醉(97.6%),而乳房手术采用全身麻醉的比例最低(38%)。共有 7 名患者(0.2%;95%置信区间:0.08%-0.4%)立即转往外院;其中 4 例与麻醉相关。只有 7 名患者(0.2%)因麻醉相关不良事件需要额外的术后麻醉相关护理,具体为心脏事件(4 例)、插管困难(2 例)、低氧血症(1 例)和躁动、恶心和头痛(1 例)。
在我们的独立日间手术中心接受日间手术的癌症患者中,与麻醉相关的不良术后结果发生率较低。这表明,经过精心选择的癌症患者,包括转移性癌症患者,可以接受麻醉进行日间手术,使癌症护理在当地可及,并减少治疗相关的旅行压力。需要更多的研究来调查与手术和癌症疾病轨迹相关的并发症发生率,以建立对日间癌症手术安全性的全面评估。