Katherine J Broughton1, Oscar Aldridge2, Sharin Pradhan3, R James Aitken1. 1. Department of General Surgery, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, Perth, Western Australia, Australia. 2. Department of General Surgery, Fiona Stanley Hospital, Perth, Western Australia, Australia. 3. Department of General Surgery, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergency laparotomies (ELs) are associated with high mortality and substantial outcome variation. There is no prospective Australian data on ELs. The aim of this study was to audit outcome after ELs in Western Australia. METHODS: A 12-week prospective audit was completed in 10 hospitals. Data collected included patient demographics, the clinical pathway, preoperative risk assessment and outcomes including 30-day mortality and length of stay. RESULTS: Data were recorded for 198 (76.2%) of 260 patients. The 30-day mortality was 6.5% (17/260) in participating hospitals, and 5.4% (19 of 354) across Western Australia. There was minimal variation between the three tertiary hospitals undertaking 220 of 354 (62.1%) ELs. The median and mean post-operative lengths of stay, excluding patients who died, were 8 and 10 days, respectively. In the 48 patients with a prospectively documented risk of ≥10%, both a consultant surgeon and anaesthetist were present for 68.8%, 62.8% were admitted to critical care and 45.8% commenced surgery within 2 h. The mortality in those retrospectively (62; 31%) and prospectively risk-assessed was 9.5% and 5.2%, respectively. CONCLUSION: This prospective EL audit demonstrated low 30-day mortality with little inter-hospital variation. Individual hospitals have scope to improve their standards of care. The importance of prospective risk assessment is clear.
BACKGROUND: Emergency laparotomies (ELs) are associated with high mortality and substantial outcome variation. There is no prospective Australian data on ELs. The aim of this study was to audit outcome after ELs in Western Australia. METHODS: A 12-week prospective audit was completed in 10 hospitals. Data collected included patient demographics, the clinical pathway, preoperative risk assessment and outcomes including 30-day mortality and length of stay. RESULTS: Data were recorded for 198 (76.2%) of 260 patients. The 30-day mortality was 6.5% (17/260) in participating hospitals, and 5.4% (19 of 354) across Western Australia. There was minimal variation between the three tertiary hospitals undertaking 220 of 354 (62.1%) ELs. The median and mean post-operative lengths of stay, excluding patients who died, were 8 and 10 days, respectively. In the 48 patients with a prospectively documented risk of ≥10%, both a consultant surgeon and anaesthetist were present for 68.8%, 62.8% were admitted to critical care and 45.8% commenced surgery within 2 h. The mortality in those retrospectively (62; 31%) and prospectively risk-assessed was 9.5% and 5.2%, respectively. CONCLUSION: This prospective EL audit demonstrated low 30-day mortality with little inter-hospital variation. Individual hospitals have scope to improve their standards of care. The importance of prospective risk assessment is clear.
Authors: Joshua A Bloomstone; Benjamin T Houseman; Evora Vicents Sande; Ann Brantley; Jessica Curran; Gerald A Maccioli; Tania Haddad; James Steinshouer; David Walker; Ramani Moonesinghe Journal: Perioper Med (Lond) Date: 2020-09-21
Authors: Marc Weijie Ong; Serene Si Ning Goh; Wei Min James Tung; Woan Wui Lim; Hilda Haoling Hu; Choong Yan Lim; Priscilla Ng; Kok Yang Tan; Tiong Thye Jerry Goo Journal: Acute Med Surg Date: 2021-10-28
Authors: Deirdre M Nally; Jan Sørensen; Gintare Valentelyte; Laura Hammond; Deborah McNamara; Dara O Kavanagh; Ken Mealy Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2019-11-02 Impact factor: 2.692