| Literature DB >> 24472674 |
Joanna C Simpson1, S Ramani Moonesinghe.
Abstract
High-risk, noncardiac surgery represents only 12.5% of surgical procedures, but 83.3% of deaths. The postanaesthetic care unit (PACU) addresses the need for an improved level of care for these patients by providing postoperative high-dependency or intensive care (Level 2 or 3). The PACU aims to improve the structure of care provision for high-risk surgical patients. By maintaining 24-hour cover at the same staffing level, the risk of poorer 'out-of- hours' care is reduced. In a PACU, whose remit is solely postoperative care, evidence-based protocols can be established to standardize the care given. The aim is to provide 24 hours of postoperative optimized care, thus targeting the period when these patients are most vulnerable, to reduce the risk of complications developing and identify complications promptly, should they occur. The PACU is set up to facilitate certain processes to aid optimized care in the postoperative period. These include invasive and noninvasive ventilation, goal-directed haemodynamic management, invasive monitoring and optimal pain management. Identification of high-risk patients who might benefit from PACU care is not always straightforward. However, tools are available to aid the clinician, supplementing clinical assessment and basic investigations. These include clinical prediction rules and cardiopulmonary exercise testing. Both the setting up and the running of a PACU clearly have cost implications. However, the reduction in postoperative morbidity, and thus patients' length of stay, should, overall, reduce costs. The benefits of a PACU should therefore be seen in terms of improved surgical outcomes, reducing postoperative morbidity and mortality, and cost savings.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24472674 PMCID: PMC3964324 DOI: 10.1186/2047-0525-2-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perioper Med (Lond) ISSN: 2047-0525
Standardized methods of risk assessment
| The use of a scoring system based on patient- or procedure-related risk factors to quantify risk | Often cost-neutral | Estimates population risk for patient rather than providing an individualized risk assessment | |
| | | Requires no specialist knowledge
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| Six-point scale used to grade patient according to comorbidities
[ | Validated in a number of settings
[ | Inter-observer variability
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| | | | Poor sensitivity and specificity for prediction of morbidity and mortality on an individual patient basis
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| Scores patients according to six variables, including whether the surgery is high risk | Discriminates moderately well between patients at low versus high risk for cardiac events after mixed noncardiac surgery
[ | Designed to identify patients at risk of cardiac complications so may miss patients at risk of other complications who may benefit from PACU care | |
| | Assesses cardiac risk
[ | Well validated | |
| A more detailed scoring system with 18 components, 6 operative variables and 12 physiological variables
[ | A revision of POSSUM, the Portsmouth POSSUM
[ | Some variables cannot be ascertained until after surgery, making it of limited use for preoperative identification of patients who may benefit from PACU care | |
| | | Variations in the model have been devised for specific patient groups, such as the Cr-POSSUM (colorectal), which has been shown to be a better predictor of outcome in this type of surgery
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| CPET is an integrative and quantitative measure of a patient’s cardiopulmonary reserve | Good evidence that CPET is useful to help predict perioperative morbidity and mortality and may aid triage to an appropriate level of postoperative care
[ | In 2008, 17% of Hospital Trusts in England had a CPET service, and a further 7% were in the process of setting one up
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| The assessment requires the patient to exercise (usually on a cycle ergometer) while oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production, and other cardiorespiratory variables are measured | RCT in progress to further evaluate its use to stratify to appropriate level of postoperative care
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ASA-PS, American Society of Anesthesiology Physical Status Score; CPET, cardiopulmonary exercise testing; PACU, postanaesthetic care unit; POSSUM, physiological and operative severity score for the enumeration of mortality and morbidity; RCRI, Lee Revised Cardiac Risk Index; RCT, randomized controlled trial.