학술논문

Nonelective coronary artery bypass graft outcomes are adversely impacted by Coronavirus disease 2019 infection, but not altered processes of care: A National COVID Cohort Collaborative and National Surgery Quality Improvement Program analysisCentral MessagePerspective
Document Type
article
Author
Emily A. Grimsley, MDJohnathan V. Torikashvili, BSHaroon M. Janjua, MSMeagan D. Read, MDAnai N. Kothari, MD, MSNate B. Verhagen, BSRicardo Pietrobon, MD, PhDPaul C. Kuo, MD, MS, MBAMichael P. Rogers, MD, MSAdam B. WilcoxAdam M. LeeAlexis GravesAlfred (Jerrod) AnzaloneAmin MannaAmit SahaAmy OlexAndrea ZhouAndrew E. WilliamsAndrew SoutherlandAndrew T. GirvinAnita WaldenAnjali A. SharathkumarBenjamin AmorBenjamin BatesBrian HendricksBrijesh PatelCaleb AlexanderCarolyn BramanteCavin Ward-CavinessCharisse Madlock-BrownChristine SuverChristopher ChuteChristopher DillonChunlei WuClare SchmittCliff TakemotoDan HousmanDavera GabrielDavid A. EichmannDiego MazzottiDon BrownEilis BoudreauElaine HillElizabeth ZampinoEmily Carlson MartiEmily R. PfaffEvan FrenchFarrukh M. KoraishyFederico MarionaFred PriorGeorge SokosGreg MartinHarold LehmannHeidi SprattHemalkumar MehtaHongfang LiuHythem SidkyJ.W. Awori HayangaJami PincavitchJaylyn ClarkJeremy Richard HarperJessica IslamJin GeJoel GagnierJoel H. SaltzJoel SaltzJohanna LoombaJohn BuseJomol MathewJoni L. RutterJulie A. McMurryJustin GuinneyJustin StarrenKaren CrowleyKatie Rebecca BradwellKellie M. WaltersKen WilkinsKenneth R. GersingKenrick Dwain CatoKimberly MurrayKristin KostkaLavance NorthingtonLee Allan PylesLeonie MisquittaLesley CottrellLili PortillaMariam DeacyMark M. BissellMarshall ClarkMary EmmettMary Morrison SaltzMatvey B. PalchukMelissa A. HaendelMeredith AdamsMeredith Temple-O'ConnorMichael G. KurillaMichele MorrisNabeel QureshiNasia SafdarNicole GarbariniNoha SharafeldinOfer SadanPatricia A. FrancisPenny Wung BurgoonPeter RobinsonPhilip R.O. PayneRafael FuentesRandeep JawaRebecca Erwin-CohenRena PatelRichard A. MoffittRichard L. ZhuRishi KamaleswaranRobert HurleyRobert T. MillerSaiju PyarajanSam G. MichaelSamuel BozzetteSandeep MallipattuSatyanarayana VedulaScott ChapmanShawn T. O'NeilSoko SetoguchiStephanie S. HongSteve JohnsonTellen D. BennettTiffany CallahanUmit TopalogluUsman SheikhValery GordonVignesh SubbianWarren A. KibbeWenndy HernandezWill BeasleyWill CooperWilliam HillegassXiaohan Tanner Zhang
Source
JTCVS Open, Vol 16, Iss , Pp 342-352 (2023)
Subject
nonelective coronary artery bypass grafting
COVID-19
pandemic
outcomes
Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system
RC666-701
Surgery
RD1-811
Language
English
ISSN
2666-2736
Abstract
Objective: The effects of Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection and altered processes of care on nonelective coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) outcomes remain unknown. We hypothesized that patients with COVID-19 infection would have longer hospital lengths of stay and greater mortality compared with COVID-negative patients, but that these outcomes would not differ between COVID-negative and pre-COVID controls. Methods: The National COVID Cohort Collaborative 2020-2022 was queried for adult patients undergoing CABG. Patients were divided into COVID-negative, COVID-active, and COVID-convalescent groups. Pre-COVID control patients were drawn from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database. Adjusted analysis of the 3 COVID groups was performed via generalized linear models. Results: A total of 17,293 patients underwent nonelective CABG, including 16,252 COVID-negative, 127 COVID-active, 367 COVID-convalescent, and 2254 pre-COVID patients. Compared to pre-COVID patients, COVID-negative patients had no difference in mortality, whereas COVID-active patients experienced increased mortality. Mortality and pneumonia were higher in COVID-active patients compared to COVID-negative and COVID-convalescent patients. Adjusted analysis demonstrated that COVID-active patients had higher in-hospital mortality, 30- and 90-day mortality, and pneumonia compared to COVID-negative patients. COVID-convalescent patients had a shorter length of stay but a higher rate of renal impairment. Conclusions: Traditional care processes were altered during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our data show that nonelective CABG in patients with active COVID-19 is associated with significantly increased rates of mortality and pneumonia. The equivalent mortality in COVID-negative and pre-COVID patients suggests that pandemic-associated changes in processes of care did not impact CABG outcomes. Additional research into optimal timing of CABG after COVID infection is warranted.