Kalata Stanley, Eton Ryan, Schoel Leah, Reddy Rishindra M, Lin Jules, Lynch William R, Chang Andrew C, Lagisetty Kiran H
Department of Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Ann Thorac Surg Short Rep. 2024 Feb 7;2(2):315-319. doi: 10.1016/j.atssr.2024.01.005. eCollection 2024 Jun.
The use of telehealth has grown exponentially since the COVID-19 pandemic. The safety of an initial telehealth preoperative evaluation for patients undergoing general thoracic procedures is unknown.
We retrospectively reviewed all patients who underwent a general thoracic surgical procedure at our academic tertiary care institution from January 2021 to December 2022. We determined that visits were performed through telehealth or an in-person visit and linked to our institutional Society of Thoracic Surgeons database to abstract outcomes. Our outcomes of interest included complications, readmissions, intraoperative conversions, and intensive care unit admissions. Hierarchical multivariate logistic regression was used and clustered within procedure type.
Of 1348 patients who underwent a procedure in our institution, 469 (34.8%) patients had an initial telehealth preoperative evaluation. We analyzed outcomes for 757 patients who underwent a major thoracic procedure. Patients who had an in-person visit tended to be older with worse functional status. After multivariable adjustment, an initial telehealth evaluation was associated with a lower adjusted complication rate (31.6% vs 40.4%; odds ratio, 0.63 [95% CI, 0.46-0.88]; = .006), with no significant difference in readmissions, intensive care unit admissions, or intraoperative conversions.
This preliminary study of the use of telehealth for preoperative evaluation of patients undergoing general thoracic procedures suggests that it is a safe and feasible alternative to an in-person evaluation. Care must be taken to ensure that this pandemic-induced trend continues to improve patient access to surgical care without worsening or creating new disparities.
自新冠疫情以来,远程医疗的使用呈指数级增长。对于接受普通胸科手术的患者,首次远程医疗术前评估的安全性尚不清楚。
我们回顾性分析了2021年1月至2022年12月在我们学术性三级医疗机构接受普通胸科手术的所有患者。我们确定就诊是通过远程医疗还是面对面进行,并与我们机构的胸外科医师协会数据库相关联以提取结果。我们感兴趣的结果包括并发症、再入院、术中中转以及重症监护病房收治情况。采用分层多变量逻辑回归分析,并按手术类型进行聚类。
在我们机构接受手术的1348例患者中,469例(34.8%)患者进行了首次远程医疗术前评估。我们分析了757例接受大型胸科手术患者的结果。进行面对面就诊的患者往往年龄较大,功能状态较差。经过多变量调整后,首次远程医疗评估与较低的调整后并发症发生率相关(31.6%对40.4%;优势比,0.63[95%CI,0.46 - 0.88];P = 0.006),再入院、重症监护病房收治或术中中转方面无显著差异。
这项关于远程医疗用于普通胸科手术患者术前评估的初步研究表明,它是面对面评估的一种安全可行的替代方法。必须注意确保这种由疫情引发的趋势继续改善患者获得手术治疗的机会,而不会恶化或产生新的差异。