학술논문

Factors associated with emergency room readmission after elective surgery for ovarian carcinoma.
Document Type
Article
Source
BMC Women's Health. 9/4/2023, Vol. 23 Issue 1, p1-8. 8p.
Subject
*HOSPITAL care quality
*PATIENT readmissions
*HOSPITAL emergency services
*ELECTIVE surgery
*HOSPITAL admission & discharge
*MEDICAL care
Language
ISSN
1472-6874
Abstract
Background: Hospital readmission is a quality metric of hospital care and has been studied in ovarian carcinoma, but its evaluation has several limitations. Also, emergency room (ER) readmission is considered an adverse effect because it represents patient costs. Therefore, our objective was to determine the rate of ER readmission, its causes, and associated factors. Methods: A retrospective study of 592 patients with ovarian carcinoma who underwent upfront surgery, neoadjuvant therapy, or surgery for recurrent disease. An analysis of factors associated with ER readmission, hospital readmission, and surgical complications was performed, including multivariate analysis to assess for case-mix factors. Results: Of 592 patients, the median age was 51 years, and the predominant type of treatment was the neoadjuvant approach (52.9%); 46% underwent upfront surgeries and six surgeries for recurrence. The ratio to ER readmission was 11.8% (70 patients), of whom 12 patients were admitted more than once. The factors associated with ER readmission were prolonged surgery, intraoperative bleeding, extended hospital stay, the time of the day when the surgery was performed, and post-surgical complications. The hospital readmissions were 4.2%, and the overall morbidity was 17.6%. In the multivariate analysis, the only factor associated with ER readmission was the presence of surgical complications (OR = 39.01). The factors independently associated with hospital readmission were the entrance to the intensive care unit (OR = 1.37), the presence of surgical complications (OR = 2.85), and ER readmission (OR = 1.45). Conclusion: ER readmission is an adverse event representing the presence of symptoms/complications in patients. Evaluating the ER readmission independently of the readmission to the hospital is critical because it will allow modifying medical care behaviors to prevent patients from unnecessarily returning to the hospital after a hospital discharge to manage preventable medical problems. Trial registration: researchregistry7882. Highlights: Emergency room readmission is an adverse effect of ovarian carcinoma and represents health system costs. Readmission was associated with prolonged surgery, intraoperative bleeding, extended hospital stays, and surgeries performed in the afternoon. Emergency room readmission is strongly associated with hospital readmission. Rosa A. Salcedo-Hernandez, David Cantú-de León and Lucely Cetina-Perez have contributed equally to the present study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]