Caron Jesse P, Horowitz Michelle, Cobb William J, Zhu Jianbin, Rosales Armando
General Surgery, AdventHealth Orlando, Orlando, USA.
Biostatistics, AdventHealth Orlando, Orlando, USA.
Cureus. 2025 Jul 22;17(7):e88545. doi: 10.7759/cureus.88545. eCollection 2025 Jul.
Background Preoperative body mass index (BMI) is known to impact surgical outcomes, but its effect on operative time in distal pancreatectomy (DP) remains unclear. This study hypothesizes that higher BMI is associated with prolonged operative time in DP, regardless of surgical approach. Methods A retrospective review of 48 patients who underwent DP, with or without splenectomy, at Advent Health Orlando in Orlando, Florida (October 2019-April 2024) was conducted. Patients were categorized by surgical approach: laparoscopic, robotic, robotic conversion to open (planned or unplanned), and open. Laparoscopic hand-assisted cases were excluded. Data included preoperative (age, sex, BMI, and American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) class) and intraoperative variables (operative time, splenectomy status, blood loss, conversion to open, and ICU admission). Pearson correlation and linear regression assessed BMI's impact on operative time. Results The mean BMI was 28.9 (range: 19.8-44.7), with 31.3% classified as obese (BMI ≥ 30). BMI correlated with longer operative time (r = 0.333, p = 0.021), although BMI categories (normal <25, overweight 25-30, obese >30) showed no significant difference (p = 0.24). Furthermore, this correlation persisted after controlling for surgical approach, tumor size, prior abdominal surgery, tumor location, ASA class, and concurrent splenectomy. BMI was not associated with conversion to open surgery, blood loss, or splenectomy rates. ICU admission was significantly associated with BMI when analyzed continuously (yes: 44.9 ± 7.6; no: 28.1 ± 5.5; p = 0.008), but not categorically (p = 0.22). Conclusion Higher BMI is significantly associated with increased operative time in DP, underscoring the need for preoperative planning in patients with elevated BMI. BMI as a continuous variable provides greater predictive value for surgical outcomes than categorical classification.
术前体重指数(BMI)已知会影响手术结果,但其对胰体尾切除术(DP)手术时间的影响仍不清楚。本研究假设,无论手术方式如何,较高的BMI与DP手术时间延长有关。方法:对2019年10月至2024年4月在佛罗里达州奥兰多市Advent Health Orlando接受DP手术(无论是否行脾切除术)的48例患者进行回顾性分析。患者按手术方式分类:腹腔镜手术、机器人手术、机器人转开放手术(计划或非计划)和开放手术。排除腹腔镜辅助手术病例。数据包括术前(年龄、性别、BMI和美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)分级)和术中变量(手术时间、脾切除状态、失血量、转为开放手术和入住重症监护病房)。采用Pearson相关性分析和线性回归评估BMI对手术时间的影响。结果:平均BMI为28.9(范围:19.8 - 44.7),31.3%的患者被归类为肥胖(BMI≥30)。BMI与较长的手术时间相关(r = 0.333,p = 0.021),尽管BMI类别(正常<25、超重25 - 30、肥胖>30)之间无显著差异(p = 0.24)。此外,在控制手术方式、肿瘤大小、既往腹部手术、肿瘤位置、ASA分级和同期脾切除术后,这种相关性仍然存在。BMI与转为开放手术、失血量或脾切除率无关。连续分析时,入住重症监护病房与BMI显著相关(是:44.9±7.6;否:28.1±5.5;p = 0.008),但分类分析时无显著相关性(p = 0.22)。结论:较高的BMI与DP手术时间增加显著相关,强调了BMI升高患者术前规划的必要性。BMI作为连续变量比分类分级对手术结果具有更大的预测价值。