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Cost of Postoperative Complications of Lower Anterior Resection for Rectal Cancer: a Nationwide Registry Study of 15,187 Patients

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the increase in hospital costs associated with postoperative complications after lower anterior resection (LAR) for rectal cancer.

Methods: The subjects of this retrospective analysis were patients who underwent elective LAR surgery between April, 2015 and March, 2017, collected from a Japanese nationwide gastroenterological surgery registry linked to hospital-based claims data. We evaluated total and category-specific hospitalization costs based on the level of postoperative complications categorized using the Clavien-Dindo (CD) classification. We assessed the relative increase in hospital costs, adjusting for preoperative factors and hospital case volume.

Results: We identified 15,187 patients (mean age 66.8) treated at 884 hospitals. Overall, 71.8% had no recorded complications, whereas 7.6%, 10.8%, 9.0%, 0.6%, and 0.2% had postoperative complications of CD grades I-V, respectively. The median (25th-75th percentiles) hospital costs were $17.3 K (16.1-19.3) for the no-complications group, and $19.1 K (17.3-22.2), $21.0 K (18.5-25.0), $27.4 K (22.4-33.9), $41.8 K (291-618), and $22.7 K (183-421) for the CD grades I-V complication groups, respectively. The multivariable model identified that complications of CD grades I-V were associated with 11%, 21%, 61%, 142%, and 70% increases in in-hospital costs compared with no complications.

Conclusions: Postoperative complications and their severity are strongly associated with increased hospital costs and health-care resource utilization. Implementing strategies to prevent postoperative complications will improve patients' clinical outcomes and reduce hospital care costs substantially.

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