KOR

e-Article

Evaluation of POSSUM and P-POSSUM scoring systems in patients undergoing colorectal surgery
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
British Journal of Surgery. Mar 01, 2003 90(3):340-345
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0007-1323
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Physiological and Operative Severity Score for the enUmeration of Mortality and morbidity (POSSUM) and Portsmouth POSSUM (P-POSSUM) equations were derived from a heterogeneous general surgical population and have been used successfully as audit tools to provide risk-adjusted operative mortality rates. Their applicability to high-risk emergency colorectal operations has not been established. METHODS: POSSUM variables were recorded for 1017 patients undergoing major elective (n = 804) or emergency (n = 213) colorectal surgery in ten hospitals. Subgroup analysis was performed to investigate the predictive capability of POSSUM and P-POSSUM in emergency and elective surgery and in patients in different age groups. RESULTS: The overall operative mortality rate was 7·5 per cent (POSSUM-estimated mortality rate 8·2 per cent; P-POSSUM-estimated mortality rate 7·1 per cent). In-hospital deaths increased exponentially with age. Both scoring systems overpredicted mortality in young patients and underpredicted mortality in the elderly (P < 0·001). Death was underpredicted by both systems for emergency cases, significantly so at a simulated emergency caseload of 47·9 per cent (P < 0·05). CONCLUSION: There is a lack of calibration of POSSUM and P-POSSUM systems at the extremes of age and high emergency workload. This has important implication in clinical practice, as consultants with a high emergency workload may seem to underperform when these scoring systems are applied. Recalibration or remodelling strategies may facilitate the application of POSSUM-based systems in colorectal surgery. Copyright © 2002 British Journal of Surgery Society Ltd. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd