Literature DB >> 29389841

Emergency general surgery in geriatric patients: A statewide analysis of surgeon and hospital volume with outcomes.

Ambar Mehta1, Linda A Dultz, Bellal Joseph, Joseph K Canner, Kent Stevens, Christian Jones, Elliott R Haut, David T Efron, Joseph V Sakran.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Geriatric patients undergoing emergency general surgery (EGS) face significant morbidity and mortality. We assessed how surgeon and hospital volumes affected these outcomes.
METHODS: We identified patients at least 65 years old in Maryland's Health Services Cost Review Commission database from 2012 to 2014 who underwent one of 12 EGS procedures, as defined by the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma, and then calculated four outcomes: mortality rate, the incidence of at least one of eight common in-hospital EGS complications, failure-to-rescue (death after experiencing a postoperative complication), and the 30-day readmission rate. Median annual volumes of geriatric-EGS procedures divided both surgeons and hospitals into two groups (low volume and high volume). Multivariable logistic regressions calculated associations between the volume groups and outcomes after adjusting for patient, surgeon, and hospital factors, and hospital clusters.
RESULTS: We identified 3,832 patients who had an EGS procedure by 302 surgeons (median: 8 geriatric-EGS/year, IQR: 3-18) at 44 hospitals (median: 82 geriatric-EGS/year, IQR: 35-132). While operating on 16.5% of all geriatric-EGS patients, low-volume surgeons had higher risk-adjusted adverse outcomes: mortality (7.0% vs. 4.0%, p = 0.005), in-hospital complications (22.1% vs. 19.7%, p = 0.13), failure-to-rescue (17.3% vs. 12.1%, p = 0.021), and 30-day readmissions (11.2% vs. 10.0%, p = 0.55). After adjustment, low-volume surgeons were associated with higher mortality (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.86, 95% CI [1.21-2.86]) and failure-to-rescue rates (aOR 1.74 [1.09-2.80]) but not in-hospital complications (aOR 1.20 [0.95-1.51]) or 30-day readmissions (aOR 1.07 [0.85-1.34]). In contrast, low-volume hospitals relative to high-volume hospitals, and hospitals serving lower proportions of geriatric-EGS patients, were not associated with adverse outcomes.
CONCLUSION: Relative to their higher-volume counterparts, surgeons performing eight or fewer geriatric-EGS procedures annually were associated with an 86% higher odds of death and 74% higher odds of failure-to-rescue in this elderly EGS patient population. These findings underscore the need for focused care of elderly surgical patients. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prognostic and epidemiological, level IV.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29389841     DOI: 10.1097/TA.0000000000001829

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg        ISSN: 2163-0755            Impact factor:   3.313


  8 in total

1.  Hospital experience predicts outcomes after high-risk geriatric surgery.

Authors:  Jill Q Dworsky; Christopher P Childers; Jeffrey Gornbein; Melinda Maggard-Gibbons; Marcia M Russell
Journal:  Surgery       Date:  2019-09-10       Impact factor: 3.982

Review 2.  Failure to rescue in surgical patients: A review for acute care surgeons.

Authors:  Justin S Hatchimonji; Elinore J Kaufman; Catherine E Sharoky; Lucy Ma; Anna E Garcia Whitlock; Daniel N Holena
Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg       Date:  2019-09       Impact factor: 3.313

3.  Benchmarking the value of care: Variability in hospital costs for common operations and its association with procedure volume.

Authors:  Cheryl K Zogg; Andrew C Bernard; Sameer A Hirji; Joseph P Minei; Kristan L Staudenmayer; Kimberly A Davis
Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg       Date:  2020-05       Impact factor: 3.697

4.  Failure to Rescue (FTR) and Pitfalls in the Management of Complex Enteric Fistulas (CEF): From Rescue Surgery to Rescue Strategy.

Authors:  Stefano Piero Bernardo Cioffi; Osvaldo Chiara; Luca Del Prete; Alessandro Bonomi; Michele Altomare; Andrea Spota; Roberto Bini; Stefania Cimbanassi
Journal:  J Pers Med       Date:  2022-02-16

5.  Structures, processes and models of care for emergency general surgery in Ontario: a cross-sectional survey.

Authors:  Graham Skelhorne-Gross; Rahima Nenshi; Angela Jerath; David Gomez
Journal:  CMAJ Open       Date:  2021-11-23

Review 6.  Mitigating the stress response to improve outcomes for older patients undergoing emergency surgery with the addition of beta-adrenergic blockade.

Authors:  Shahin Mohseni; Bellal Joseph; Carol Jane Peden
Journal:  Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg       Date:  2021-04-13       Impact factor: 2.374

7.  Surgery for acute cholecystitis in severely comorbid patients: a population-based study on acute cholecystitis.

Authors:  Erik Osterman; Louise Helenius; Christina Larsson; Sofia Jakobsson; Tamali Majumder; Anders Blomberg; Jennie Wickenberg; Fredrik Linder
Journal:  BMC Gastroenterol       Date:  2022-08-04       Impact factor: 2.847

8.  Gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: Evaluation of morbidity and mortality. Protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in Italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (The GESEMM study).

Authors:  Gianluca Costa; Pietro Fransvea; Caterina Puccioni; Francesco Giovinazzo; Filippo Carannante; Gianfranco Bianco; Alberto Catamero; Gianluca Masciana; Valentina Miacci; Marco Caricato; Gabriella Teresa Capolupo; Gabriele Sganga
Journal:  Front Surg       Date:  2022-09-16
  8 in total

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