| Literature DB >> 17550623 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The decision on whether to operate on a sick elderly person with an intra-abdominal emergency is one of the most difficult in general surgery. A predictive risk-score would be of great value in this situation.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17550623 PMCID: PMC1894959 DOI: 10.1186/1749-7922-2-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Surgical risk scores classified by outcome measure and need for intra-operative information
| ASA1 | ASA | |
| APACHE-II8 | APACHE-II | |
| Donati Score16 | Goldman Cardiac Risk Index3 | |
| Hardman Index38 | Veltkamp Score44 | |
| Glasgow Aneurysm Score12 | VA Respiratory Failure Score45 | |
| Sickness Assessment14 | VA Pneumonia Prediction Index46 | |
| Boey Score32 | ||
| Hacetteppe Score34 | ||
| Physiological POSSUM35 | ||
| Mannheim Peritonitis Index28 | POSSUM, P-POSSUM | |
| Reiss Index11 | ||
| Fitness Score13 | ||
| POSSUM6, P-POSSUM7 | ||
| Cleveland Colorectal Model43 | ||
| Surgical Risk Scale47 |
Observed mortality in emergency surgery in the elderly by ASA grade
| Arenal15 | 710 | 70 | 6% | 19% | 38% | 89% | |
| Barlow14 | 204 | 64 | 0% | 9% | 50% | 75% | |
| Cook18 | 107 | 65 | 0% | 17% | 25% | 77% | 91% |
| Akoh19 | 83 | 80 | - | 13% | 25% | 75% | - |
| Makela20 | 71* | 70 | 0% | 0% | 9% | 29% | 100% |
| Cook50 | 49 | 75 | 0% | 0% | 10% | 63% | 100% |
Combined boxes when study has combined two ASA classes for analysis; -indicates no patients with this ASA score in study; * all 71 patients had perforated diverticular disease
Summary of the 6 studies observing mortality after emergency surgery in the elderly
| Total deaths | 31 | 62 | 143 | 41 | |
| Total cases | 511 | 338 | 329 | 46 | |
| Mortality | |||||
Predicted risk of mortality after major surgery performed as urgent/emergency. (Adapted from Donati et al16)
| I | 2% | 0% |
| II | 8.2% | 12.9% |
| III | 21% | 30.6% |
| IV | 44.3% | 56.8% |
Mortality risk from perforated peptic ulcer according to Boey et al 32, and Irvin33
| 0 | 0 | 11% | |
| Preoperative BP < 100 mmHg | 1 | 10% | 27% |
| Delayed presentation > 24 h | 2 | 45.5% | 55% |
| Major medical illness present | 3 | 100% | 100% |
Comparison of observed post-operative mortality with GAS in the 3 largest studies
| Korhonen41 | n = 836 | Samy12 | n = 500 | Samy40 | n = 320 |
| < 73 | 17% | < 70 | 6% | < 70 | 0% |
| 74 – 82 | 35% | 70 – 75 | 6% | 70 – 75 | 2% |
| 83 – 89 | 46% | 76 – 85 | 16% | 76 – 85 | 7% |
| 90 – 97 | 61% | > 85 | 35% | 86 – 95 | 36% |
| > 98 | 76% | > 95 | 80% | ||
Variables needed to score four post-operative scoring systems
| Cook and Day18 | Age, ASA, gender, ICU admission, invasive monitoring. |
| Mannheim Peritonitis Index 28 | Age, gender, presence of organ failure/cancer, duration of pre-op peritonitis, origin of sepsis, nature of peritonitis/exudate. |
| Surgical Risk Score47 | ASA, NCEPOD score, BUPA score |