» Articles » PMID: 37507304

Emergency Thoracic Surgery Patients Have Worse Risk-adjusted Outcomes Than Non-emergency Patients

Overview
Journal Surgery
Specialty General Surgery
Date 2023 Jul 28
PMID 37507304
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Outcomes for patients undergoing emergency thoracic operations have not been well described. This study was designed to compare postoperative outcomes among patients undergoing emergency versus nonemergency thoracic operations.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database (2005-2018). We identified patients who underwent emergency thoracic operations using current procedural technology codes. Patients were then sorted into 1 of 4 cohorts: lung and chest wall, hiatal hernia, esophagus, and pericardium. Emergency versus nonemergency outcomes were compared. Univariate logistic regression was performed with "emergency status" as the independent variable and 30-day postoperative outcomes as the dependent variables. Multiple logistic regression models were performed to control for preoperative factors.

Results: Of 90,398 thoracic operations analyzed, 4,044 (4.5%) were emergency. Common emergency operations were pericardial window (n = 580, 10.2%), laparoscopic hiatal hernia repair (n = 366, 8.9%), thoracoscopic partial lung decortication (n = 334, 8.1%), thoracoscopic wedge resection (n = 301, 7.3%), thoracoscopic total lung decortication (n = 256, 6.2%), and open repair of hiatal hernia without mesh (n = 254, 6.2%). In all 4 cohorts, 30-day postoperative complications occurred more frequently after emergency surgery. After controlling for patient characteristics, 8 complications were more frequent after emergency lung and chest wall surgery, 5 complications were more frequent after emergency hiatal hernia surgery, and 3 complications were more frequent after emergency pericardium surgery. Risk-adjusted complications were not different after emergency esophageal surgery.

Conclusion: Patients undergoing emergency thoracic operations have worse risk-adjusted outcomes than those undergoing nonemergency thoracic operations. Subset analysis is needed to determine what factors contribute to increased adverse outcomes in specific patient populations.

References
1.
Andrasi L, Paszt A, Simonka Z, Abraham S, Erdos M, Rosztoczy A . Surgical Treatment of Esophageal Achalasia in the Era of Minimally Invasive Surgery. JSLS. 2021; 25(1). PMC: 8035823. DOI: 10.4293/JSLS.2020.00099. View

2.
Havens J, Peetz A, Do W, Cooper Z, Kelly E, Askari R . The excess morbidity and mortality of emergency general surgery. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2015; 78(2):306-11. DOI: 10.1097/TA.0000000000000517. View

3.
Van Natta T, Smith B, Bricker S, Putnam B . Hilar control in penetrating chest trauma: a simplified approach to an underutilized maneuver. J Trauma. 2009; 66(6):1564-9. DOI: 10.1097/TA.0b013e31817fdf2d. View

4.
Bilimoria K, Liu Y, Paruch J, Zhou L, Kmiecik T, Ko C . Development and evaluation of the universal ACS NSQIP surgical risk calculator: a decision aid and informed consent tool for patients and surgeons. J Am Coll Surg. 2013; 217(5):833-42.e1-3. PMC: 3805776. DOI: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2013.07.385. View

5.
Alexander G . A retrospective review comparing the treatment outcomes of emergency lung resection for massive haemoptysis with and without preoperative bronchial artery embolization. Eur J Cardiothorac Surg. 2013; 45(2):251-5. DOI: 10.1093/ejcts/ezt336. View