학술논문

Thirty-Day Complications, Unplanned Hospital Encounters, and Mortality after Endosonography and/or Guided Bronchoscopy: A Prospective Study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cancers. Sep2023, Vol. 15 Issue 18, p4531. 19p.
Subject
*PNEUMONIA
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*ENDOSCOPIC ultrasonography
*TIME
*MEDIASTINITIS
*LUNG tumors
*MANN Whitney U Test
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*ODDS ratio
*DATA analysis software
*BRONCHOSCOPY
*LONGITUDINAL method
*COMORBIDITY
Language
ISSN
2072-6694
Abstract
Simple Summary: This study confirmed the overall safety of endosonography and guided bronchoscopy, even in a cohort of patients with multiple comorbidities and a high prevalence of advanced cancer. However, it suggested that implementing a 30-day follow-up in routine clinical practice would also help identify and treat clinically relevant late complications promptly while establishing a more realistic rate of adverse events for these procedures. Background and objective: Limited data exist regarding the adverse events of advanced diagnostic bronchoscopy, with most of the available information derived from retrospective datasets that primarily focus on early complications. Methods: We conducted a 15-month prospective cohort study among consecutive patients undergoing endosonography and/or guided bronchoscopy under general anesthesia. We evaluated the 30-day incidence of severe complications, any complication, unplanned hospital encounters, and deaths. Additionally, we analyzed the time of onset (immediate, within 1 h of the procedure; early, 1 h–24 h; late, 24 h–30 days) and identified risk factors associated with these events. Results: Thirty-day data were available for 697 out of 701 (99.4%) enrolled patients, with 85.6% having suspected malignancy and multiple comorbidities (median Charlson Comorbidity Index (IQR): 4 (2–5)). Severe complications occurred in only 17 (2.4%) patients, but among them, 10 (58.8%) had unplanned hospital encounters and 2 (11.7%) died within 30 days. A significant proportion of procedure-related severe complications (8/17, 47.1%); unplanned hospital encounters (8/11, 72.7%); and the two deaths occurred days or weeks after the procedure. Low-dose attenuation in the biopsy site on computed tomography was independently associated with any complication (OR: 1.87; 95% CI 1.13–3.09); unplanned hospital encounters (OR: 2.17; 95% CI 1.10–4.30); and mortality (OR: 4.19; 95% CI 1.74–10.11). Conclusions: Severe complications arising from endosonography and guided bronchoscopy, although uncommon, have significant clinical consequences. A substantial proportion of adverse events occur days after the procedure, potentially going unnoticed and exerting a negative clinical impact if a proactive surveillance program is not implemented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]