[Osorio J] Department of Surgery, Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge, L'Hospitalet del Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain. [Madrazo Z] Department of Surgery, Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge, L'Hospitalet del Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain. [Videla S] Department of Clinical Pharmacology, Clinical Research Support Unit (HUB-IDIBELL), Bellvitge University Hospital, L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain. [Sainz B] Department of Surgery, Complejo Hospitalario de Navarra, Pamplona, Spain. [Rodríguez-Gonzalez A] Department of Surgery, Donostia University Hospital, San Sebastian, Spain. [Campos A] Department of Surgery, Parc Taulí Health Corporation, Sabadell Hospital, Sabadell, Spain. [Ruiz-Luna D] Servei de Cirurgia, Hospital de Terrassa, Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa, Terrassa, Spain
Consorci Sanitari de Terrassa
2023-06-21T08:12:45Z
2023-06-21T08:12:45Z
2022-10
Coronavirus; Operacions quirúrgiques; Epidemiologia
Coronavirus; Intervenciones quirúrgicas; Epidemiología
Coronavirus; Surgical procedures; Epidemiology
Background: Surgical failure-to-rescue (FTR, death rate following complications) is a reliable cross-sectional quality of care marker, but has not been evaluated dynamically. We aimed to study changes in FTR following emergency surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic. Material and methods: Matched cohort study including all COVID-19-non-infected adult patients undergoing emergency general surgery in 25 Spanish hospitals during COVID-19 pandemic peak (March-April 2020), non-peak (May-June 2020), and 2019 control periods. A propensity score-matched comparative analysis was conducted using a logistic regression model, in which period was regressed on observed baseline characteristics. Subsequently, a mixed effects logistic regression model was constructed for each variable of interest. Main variable was FTR. Secondary variables were post-operative complications, readmissions, reinterventions, and length of stay. Results: 5003 patients were included (948, 1108, and 2947 in the pandemic peak, non-peak, and control periods), with comparable clinical characteristics, prognostic scores, complications, reintervention, rehospitalization rates, and length of stay across periods. FTR was greater during the pandemic peak than during non-peak and pre-pandemic periods (22.5% vs. 17.2% and 12.7%), being this difference confirmed in adjusted analysis (odds ratio [OR] 2.13, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 1.27-3.66). There was sensible inter-hospital variability in FTR changes during the pandemic peak (median FTR change +8.77%, IQR 0-29.17%) not observed during the pandemic non-peak period (median FTR change 0%, IQR -6.01-6.72%). Greater FTR increase was associated with higher COVID-19 incidence (OR 2.31, 95% CI 1.31-4.16) and some hospital characteristics, including tertiary level (OR 3.07, 95% CI 1.27-8.00), medium-volume (OR 2.79, 95% CI 1.14-7.34), and high basal-adjusted complication risk (OR 2.21, 95% CI 1.07-4.72). Conclusion: FTR following emergency surgery experienced a heterogeneous increase during different periods of the COVID-19 pandemic, suggesting it to behave as an indicator of hospital resilience. FTR monitoring could facilitate identification of centres in special needs during ongoing health care challenges.
Article
Published version
English
Operacions quirúrgiques; COVID-19 (Malaltia); ANALYTICAL, DIAGNOSTIC AND THERAPEUTIC TECHNIQUES, AND EQUIPMENT::Surgical Procedures, Operative; DISEASES::Virus Diseases::RNA Virus Infections::Nidovirales Infections::Coronaviridae Infections::Coronavirus Infections; TÉCNICAS Y EQUIPOS ANALÍTICOS, DIAGNÓSTICOS Y TERAPÉUTICOS::intervenciones quirúrgicas; ENFERMEDADES::virosis::infecciones por virus ARN::infecciones por Nidovirales::infecciones por Coronaviridae::infecciones por Coronavirus
Elsevier
International Journal of Surgery;106
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijsu.2022.106890
Attribution 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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