Dyer Matthew W, Kor Benjamin T, Kor Nathan T, Hanson Andrew C, Kor Jennifer J, Kor Todd M, Stewart Thomas M, Sviggum Hans P
Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Department of Clinical Trials and Biostatistics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Anesthesiol Res Pract. 2024 May 22;2024:6989174. doi: 10.1155/2024/6989174. eCollection 2024.
Anesthesia providers categorize patients utilizing the American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status (ASA-PS) classification originally created by the ASA in 1941. There is published variability and discordance among providers when assigning patient ASA scores in part due to the subjectivity of scoring utilizing patient medical conditions, but variability is also found using objective findings like BMI. To date, there are few studies evaluating the accuracy of anesthesia providers' ASA assignment based on objective body mass index (BMI) alone. The aim of this retrospective chart review is to determine improvement in accuracy of anesthesia providers to correctly assign patient ASA scores, based on BMI criteria added to the ASA-PS in October of 2014, utilizing a multifaceted strategy including creation of an active finance committee in the fall of 2015, multiple e-mail communications about the updated definitions and recommendations for ASA-PS scoring in the fall of 2015 and spring of 2016, a department grand rounds presentation in February 2016, placement of laminated copies of the ASA definitions and recommendations in the anesthesia chartrooms, and the development of a tool embedded into our EMR providing a recommendation of ASA-PS based on patient comorbidity findings.
After attaining IRB approval, all eligible patients over the age of 18 who had surgical procedures under general anesthesia at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN, between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2020, were retrospectively analyzed. A segmented logistic regression model was used to estimate the trends (per-year change in odds) of ASA under classification according to severity of obesity during 3 epochs: preimplementation (2010-2014), implementation (2015), and postimplementation (2016-2020).
A total of 16,467 patients of the 200,423 (8.2%) patients with obesity (class 1, 2, and 3) were underscored based on BMI alone. Accuracy of ASA-PS classification, as it pertains to BMI alone, was found to show meaningful improvement year-to-year following the updated ASA-PS guidelines with examples released in October of 2014 ( < 0.001). Most of the improvement occurred in 2015-2017 with relatively little between-year variability in the rate of underscoring from 2017-2020.
Despite updated ASA-PS published guidelines, providers may still be unaware of the updated guidelines and inclusion of examples used within the ASA-PS classification system. Accuracy of scoring did improve annually following the release of the updated guidelines with examples as well as department-wide educational activities on the topic. Additional education and awareness should be offered to those responsible for preanesthesia evaluation and assignment of ASA-PS in patients to improve accuracy as it pertains to BMI.
麻醉医生使用美国麻醉医师协会身体状况(ASA-PS)分类对患者进行分级,该分类由美国麻醉医师协会于1941年创建。在为患者分配ASA评分时,医生之间存在已公布的变异性和不一致性,部分原因是利用患者医疗状况进行评分具有主观性,但使用如体重指数(BMI)等客观指标时也存在变异性。迄今为止,很少有研究仅基于客观体重指数(BMI)评估麻醉医生分配ASA分级的准确性。本回顾性病历审查的目的是确定,基于2014年10月添加到ASA-PS中的BMI标准,通过多方面策略,包括在2015年秋季成立一个活跃的财务委员会、在2015年秋季和2016年春季多次发送关于ASA-PS评分更新定义和建议的电子邮件、在2016年2月进行部门大查房演示、在麻醉科室放置ASA定义和建议的覆膜副本,以及开发嵌入电子病历系统的工具以根据患者合并症结果提供ASA-PS建议,麻醉医生正确分配患者ASA评分的准确性是否有所提高。
获得机构审查委员会(IRB)批准后,对2010年1月1日至2020年12月31日期间在明尼苏达州罗切斯特市梅奥诊所接受全身麻醉手术的所有18岁以上合格患者进行回顾性分析。使用分段逻辑回归模型估计在三个时期(实施前(2010 - 2014年)、实施期(2015年)和实施后(2016 - 2020年))根据肥胖严重程度进行的ASA分级不足的趋势(每年优势比变化)。
在200,423名肥胖患者(1、2和3级)中,共有16,467名患者(8.2%)仅基于BMI被低估。发现仅就BMI而言,遵循于2014年10月发布的带有示例的更新ASA-PS指南后,ASA-PS分类准确性逐年有显著提高(<0.001)。大部分改进发生在2015 - 2017年,2017 - 2020年之间评分不足率的年际变异性相对较小。
尽管发布了最新的ASA-PS指南,但医生可能仍未意识到这些更新的指南以及ASA-PS分类系统中所使用的示例。随着更新指南及示例的发布以及全科室关于该主题的教育活动开展,评分准确性确实逐年提高。对于负责麻醉前评估和为患者分配ASA-PS的人员,应提供更多教育和提高认识,以提高与BMI相关的准确性。