학술논문

Association of Patient Frailty With Increased Morbidity After Common Ambulatory General Surgery Operations
Document Type
article
Source
JAMA Surgery. 153(2)
Subject
Clinical Research
Aging
Patient Safety
6.4 Surgery
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
Good Health and Well Being
Aged
Aged
80 and over
Ambulatory Surgical Procedures
Breast
Databases
Protein
Female
Frailty
General Surgery
Herniorrhaphy
Humans
Incidence
Intraoperative Complications
Male
Middle Aged
Parathyroid Glands
Postoperative Complications
Retrospective Studies
Severity of Illness Index
Thyroid Gland
United States
Language
Abstract
ImportanceFrailty is a measure of decreased physiological reserve that is associated with morbidity and mortality in major elective and emergency general surgery operations, independent of chronological age. To date, the association of frailty with outcomes in ambulatory general surgery has not been established.ObjectiveTo determine the association between frailty and perioperative morbidity in patients undergoing ambulatory general surgery operations.Design, setting, and participantsA retrospective cohort study was conducted of 140 828 patients older than 40 years of age from the 2007-2010 American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Participant Use File who underwent ambulatory and 23-hour-stay hernia, breast, thyroid, or parathyroid surgery. Data analysis was performed from August 18, 2016, to June 21, 2017.Main outcomes and measuresThe association between the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program modified frailty index and perioperative morbidity was determined via multivariable logistic regression with random-effects modeling to control for clustering within Current Procedural Terminology codes.ResultsA total of 140 828 patients (80 147 women and 60 681 men; mean [SD] age, 59.3 [12.0] years) underwent ambulatory hernia (n = 71 455), breast (n = 51 267), thyroid, or parathyroid surgery (n = 18 106). Of these patients, 2457 (1.7%) experienced any type of perioperative complication and 971 (0.7%) experienced serious perioperative complications. An increasing modified frailty index was associated with a stepwise increase in the incidence of complications. In multivariable analysis adjusting for age, sex, race/ethnicity, anesthesia type, tobacco use, renal failure, corticosteroid use, and clustering by Current Procedural Terminology codes, an intermediate modified frailty index score (0.18-0.35, corresponding to 2-3 frailty traits) was associated with statistically significant odds ratios of 1.70 (95% CI, 1.54-1.88; P