Impact of preoperative risk factors on outcome after gastrectomy

Abstract Background Gastrectomy is associated with relevant postoperative morbidity. However, outcome of surgery can be improved by careful selection of patients. The objective of the current study was therefore to identify preoperative risk factors that might impact on patients’ further outcome aft...

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Main Authors: Ann-Kathrin Eichelmann, Meltem Saidi, Kirsten Lindner, Christina Lenschow, Daniel Palmes, Andreas Pascher, Richard Hummel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-01-01
Series:World Journal of Surgical Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12957-020-1790-6
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spelling doaj-c860c9b41fdd4bc794cf0a620bddf2c12021-01-24T12:21:53ZengBMCWorld Journal of Surgical Oncology1477-78192020-01-0118111010.1186/s12957-020-1790-6Impact of preoperative risk factors on outcome after gastrectomyAnn-Kathrin Eichelmann0Meltem Saidi1Kirsten Lindner2Christina Lenschow3Daniel Palmes4Andreas Pascher5Richard Hummel6Department of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery, University Hospital MünsterDepartment of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery, University Hospital MünsterDepartment of Surgery, University Hospital of Schleswig-HolsteinDepartment of General, Visceral, Vascular and Pediatric Surgery, University Hospital of WürzburgDepartment of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery, University Hospital MünsterDepartment of General, Visceral and Transplant Surgery, University Hospital MünsterDepartment of Surgery, University Hospital of Schleswig-HolsteinAbstract Background Gastrectomy is associated with relevant postoperative morbidity. However, outcome of surgery can be improved by careful selection of patients. The objective of the current study was therefore to identify preoperative risk factors that might impact on patients’ further outcome after surgical resection. Methods Preoperative risk factors having respectively different surgical risk scores for major complex surgery (including Cologne Risk Score, p-/o-POSSUM, and NSQIP risk score) of patients that underwent gastrectomy for AEG II/III tumors and gastric cancer were correlated with complications according to Clavien-Dindo and outcome. Patients who underwent surgery in palliative intention were excluded from further analysis. Results Subtotal gastrectomy was performed in 23%, gastrectomy in 59%, and extended gastrectomy in 18% in a total of 139 patients (mean age: 64 years old). Thirty six percent experienced a minor complication (Dindo I-II) and 24% a major complication (Dindo III-V), which resulted in a prolonged hospital stay (p < 0.001). In-hospital mortality (=Dindo V) was 2.5%. Besides age, type of surgical procedure impacted on complications with extended gastrectomy showing the highest risk (p = 0.005). The o-POSSUM score failed to predict mortality accurately. We observed a highly positive correlation between predicted morbidity respectively mortality and occurrence of complications estimated by p-POSSUM (p = 0.005), Cologne Risk (p = 0.007), and NSQIP scores (p < 0.001). Conclusion The results demonstrate a significant association between different risk scores and occurrence of complications following gastrectomy. The p-POSSUM, Cologne Risk, and NSQIP score exhibited superior performance than the o-POSSUM score. Therefore, these scores might allow identification and selection of high-risk patients and thus might be highly useful for clinical decision making.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12957-020-1790-6Gastric cancerGastrectomyRisk factorsP-/O-POSSUMNational Surgical Quality Improvement Program Surgical Risk Calculator
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ann-Kathrin Eichelmann
Meltem Saidi
Kirsten Lindner
Christina Lenschow
Daniel Palmes
Andreas Pascher
Richard Hummel
spellingShingle Ann-Kathrin Eichelmann
Meltem Saidi
Kirsten Lindner
Christina Lenschow
Daniel Palmes
Andreas Pascher
Richard Hummel
Impact of preoperative risk factors on outcome after gastrectomy
World Journal of Surgical Oncology
Gastric cancer
Gastrectomy
Risk factors
P-/O-POSSUM
National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Surgical Risk Calculator
author_facet Ann-Kathrin Eichelmann
Meltem Saidi
Kirsten Lindner
Christina Lenschow
Daniel Palmes
Andreas Pascher
Richard Hummel
author_sort Ann-Kathrin Eichelmann
title Impact of preoperative risk factors on outcome after gastrectomy
title_short Impact of preoperative risk factors on outcome after gastrectomy
title_full Impact of preoperative risk factors on outcome after gastrectomy
title_fullStr Impact of preoperative risk factors on outcome after gastrectomy
title_full_unstemmed Impact of preoperative risk factors on outcome after gastrectomy
title_sort impact of preoperative risk factors on outcome after gastrectomy
publisher BMC
series World Journal of Surgical Oncology
issn 1477-7819
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background Gastrectomy is associated with relevant postoperative morbidity. However, outcome of surgery can be improved by careful selection of patients. The objective of the current study was therefore to identify preoperative risk factors that might impact on patients’ further outcome after surgical resection. Methods Preoperative risk factors having respectively different surgical risk scores for major complex surgery (including Cologne Risk Score, p-/o-POSSUM, and NSQIP risk score) of patients that underwent gastrectomy for AEG II/III tumors and gastric cancer were correlated with complications according to Clavien-Dindo and outcome. Patients who underwent surgery in palliative intention were excluded from further analysis. Results Subtotal gastrectomy was performed in 23%, gastrectomy in 59%, and extended gastrectomy in 18% in a total of 139 patients (mean age: 64 years old). Thirty six percent experienced a minor complication (Dindo I-II) and 24% a major complication (Dindo III-V), which resulted in a prolonged hospital stay (p < 0.001). In-hospital mortality (=Dindo V) was 2.5%. Besides age, type of surgical procedure impacted on complications with extended gastrectomy showing the highest risk (p = 0.005). The o-POSSUM score failed to predict mortality accurately. We observed a highly positive correlation between predicted morbidity respectively mortality and occurrence of complications estimated by p-POSSUM (p = 0.005), Cologne Risk (p = 0.007), and NSQIP scores (p < 0.001). Conclusion The results demonstrate a significant association between different risk scores and occurrence of complications following gastrectomy. The p-POSSUM, Cologne Risk, and NSQIP score exhibited superior performance than the o-POSSUM score. Therefore, these scores might allow identification and selection of high-risk patients and thus might be highly useful for clinical decision making.
topic Gastric cancer
Gastrectomy
Risk factors
P-/O-POSSUM
National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Surgical Risk Calculator
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12957-020-1790-6
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