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find Keyword "postoperative complication" 40 results
  • Database research part Ⅷ: postoperative risks and complications of colorectal cancer

    ObjectiveTo analyze the risks and complications after operation of colorectal cancer in the current version of Database from Colorectal Cancer (DACCA).MethodsThe DACCA version selected for this data analysis was the updated version on July 28th, 2020. The data items included surgery reaction, body temperature, flatus, pain and mental status; preoperative complication, postoperative complication, short-term and long-term complication. The selected data items were statistically analyzed.ResultsThe total number of medical records (data rows) that met the criteria was 6 422, including 4 185 (65.2%) valid data on surgery reaction, 3 833 (59.7%) valid data on body temperature, 3 835 (59.7%) valid data on flatus, 3 597 (56.0%) valid data on pain, 3 551 (55.3%) valid data on mental status, 6 422 (100%) valid data on preoperative complications, postoperative complications, short-term complications and long-term complications. In the surgical response, 1 517 (36.2%) lines of data showed “normal” structure were the most. Among the days with elevated body temperature, the number of 0-day data lines with the structure of “body temperature >37.5 ℃” was the highest, with 1 980 (51.7%). In postoperative flatus, there were 1 675 (43.7%) data lines with the structure showing “3 days”. The largest number of rows (2 755, 76.6%) showed a structure that was “not obvious” in the pain scale. The mental status showed the highest number of “better” rows (2 976, 83.8%). There were 50 preoperative complications (0.8%). And 595 postoperative complications (9.3%), including anastomotic leakage (80, 13.4%), inflammatory ileus (62, 10.4%), pulmonary infection (57, 9.6%), and anastomotic bleeding (56, 9.4%), etc. There were 6 169 (96.1%) without short-term complication in structural form. There were 6 283 (97.8%) without long-term complications.ConclusionsThe changes in complications shown in the real world data from DACCA suggest that the focus of postoperative risks must be changed with the over the follow-up time. As for the complication evaluation system, it is necessary to establish a complete evaluation system combining the corresponding types and risks, to carry out valuable complication researches.

    Release date:2021-04-25 05:33 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Research progress of clinical prediction model in postoperative complications of gastric cancer

    ObjectiveTo summarise the application research progress of clinical prediction models in postoperative complications of gastric cancer, in order to reduce the risk of complications after gastric cancer surgery. MethodThe literature on the study of postoperative complications of gastric cancer at home and abroad was read and reviewed. ResultsAt present, the main way of treating gastric cancer was still radical resection, and the occurrence of complications after surgical treatment seriously affected the recovery and survival quality of patients. With the deepening of research, the prediction models of postoperative complications in gastric cancer were constantly constructed, and these models provided strong evidence for the early judgement of postoperative complications in gastric cancer, and provided a scientific basis for the improvement of patients’ life quality. ConclusionClinical predictive models are expected to become risk screening tools for predicting the risk of postoperative complications of gastric cancer with clinical utility.

    Release date:2024-05-28 01:54 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Impact of preoperative nutritional status on postoperative complications in patients undergoing extreme sphincter-preserving surgery following neoadjuvant therapy: a study based on DACCA database

    ObjectiveTo understand the impact of preoperative nutritional status on the postoperative complications for patients with low/ultra-low rectal cancer undergoing extreme sphincter-preserving surgery following neoadjuvant therapy. MethodsThe patients with low/ultra-low rectal cancer who underwent extreme sphincter-preserving surgery following neoadjuvant therapy from January 2009 to December 2020 were retrospectively collected using the Database from Colorectal Cancer (DACCA), and then who were assigned into a nutritional risk group (the score was low than 3 by the Nutrition Risk Screening 2002) and non-nutritional risk group (the score was 3 or more by the Nutrition Risk Screening 2002). The postoperative complications and survival were analyzed for the patients with or without nutritional risk. The postoperative complications were defined as early-term (complications occurring within 30 d after surgery), middle-term (complications occurring during 30–180 d after surgery), and long-term (complications occurring at 180 d and more after surgery). The survival indicators included overall survival and disease-specific survival. ResultsA total of 680 patients who met the inclusion criteria for this study were retrieved from the DACCA database. Among them, there were 500 (73.5%) patients without nutritional risk and 180 (26.5%) patients with nutritional risk. The postoperative follow-up time was 0–152 months (with average 48.9 months). Five hundreds and forty-three survived, including 471 (86.7%) patients with free-tumors survival and 72 (13.3%) patients with tumors survival. There were 137 deaths, including 122 (89.1%) patients with cancer related deaths and 15 (10.9%) patients with non-cancer related deaths. There were 48 (7.1%) cases of early-term postoperative complications, 51 (7.5%) cases of middle-term complications, and 17 (2.5%) cases of long-term complications. There were no statistical differences in the incidence of overall complications between the patients with and without nutritional risk (χ2=3.749, P=0.053; χ2=2.205, P=0.138; χ2=310, P=0.578). The specific complications at different stages after surgery (excluding the anastomotic leakage complications in the patients with nutritional risk was higher in patients without nutritional risk, P=0.034) had no statistical differences between the two groups (P>0.05). The survival curves (overall survival and disease-specific survival) using the Kaplan-Meier method had no statistical differences between the patients with and without nutritional risk (χ2=3.316, P=0.069; χ2=3.712, P=0.054). ConclusionsFrom the analysis results of this study, for the rectal cancer patients who underwent extreme sphincter-preserving surgery following neoadjuvant therapy, the patients with preoperative nutritional risk are more prone to anastomotic leakage within 30 d after surgery. Although other postoperative complications and long-term survival outcomes have no statistical differences between patients with and without nutritional risk, preoperative nutritional management for them cannot be ignored.

    Release date:2024-08-30 06:05 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Ex vivo liver resection and autotransplantation for end-stage hepatic alveolar echinococcosis: Risk factors and prediction model for severe postoperative complications

    ObjectiveTo investigate the risk factors affecting severe postoperative complications (Clavien-Dindo classification Ⅲa or higher) in patients with end-stage hepatic alveolar echinococcosis (HAE) underwent ex vivo liver resection and autotransplantation (ELRA), and to develop a nomogram prediction model. MethodsThe clinical data of end-stage HAE patients who underwent ELRA at the West China Hospital of Sichuan University from January 2014 to June 2024 were retrospectively analyzed. The logistic regression was used to analyze the risk factors affecting severe postoperative complications. A nomogram prediction model was established basing on LASSO regression and its efficiency was evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, calibration curve, and decision curve analysis. Simultaneously, a generalized linear model regression was used to explore the preoperative risk factors affecting the total surgery time. Test level was α=0.05. ResultsA total of 132 end-stage HAE patients who underwent ELRA were included. The severe postoperative complications occurred in 47 (35.6%) patients. The multivariate logistic analysis results showed that the patients with invasion of the main trunk of the portal vein or the first branch of the contralateral portal vein (type P2) had a higher risk of severe postoperative complications compared to those with invasion of the first branch of the ipsilateral portal vein (type P1) [odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI)=8.24 (1.53, 44.34), P=0.014], the patients with albumin bilirubin index (ALBI) grade 1 had a lower risk of severe postoperative complications compared to those with grade 2 or higher [OR(95%CI)=0.26(0.08, 0.83), P=0.023]. Additionally, an increased total surgery time or the autologous blood reinfusion was associated with an increased risk of severe postoperative complications [OR(95%CI)=1.01(1.00, 1.01), P=0.009; OR(95%CI)=1.00(1.00, 1.00), P=0.043]. The nomogram prediction model constructed with two risk factors, ALBI grade and total surgery time, selected by LASSO regression, showed a good discrimination for the occurrence of severe complications after ELRA [area under the ROC curve (95%CI) of 0.717 (0.625, 0.808)]. The generalized linear regression model analysis identified the invasion of the portal vein to extent type P2 and more distant contralateral second portal vein branch invasion (type P3), as well as the presence of distant metastasis, as risk factors affecting total surgery time [β (95%CI) for type P2/type P1=110.26 (52.94, 167.58), P<0.001; β (95%CI) for type P3/type P1=109.25 (50.99, 167.52), P<0.001; β (95%CI) for distant metastasis present/absent=61.22 (4.86, 117.58), P=0.035]. ConclusionsFrom the analysis results of this study, for the end-stage HAE patients with portal vein invasion degree type P2, ALBI grade 2 or above, longer total surgery time, and more autologous blood transfusion need to be closely monitored. Preoperative strict evaluation of the first hepatic portal invasion and distant metastasis is necessary to reduce the risk of severe complications after ELRA. The nomogram prediction model constructed based on ABLI grade and total surgery time in this study demonstrates a good predictive performance for severe postoperative complications, which can provide a reference for clinical intervention decision-making.

    Release date:2024-11-27 02:52 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Predictive value of cardiopulmonary exercise test in the postoperative complications in patients with esophageal cancer: A retrospective cohort study

    Objective To explore the predictive value of cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) combined with clinical indexes in the postoperative complications. Methods The clinical data and CPET data (including lung function) of patients undergoing radical esophagectomy in Xuzhou Central Hospital from January 2018 to March 2022 were collected. Univariate analysis and multivariate logistic regression analysis were used to analyze the meaningful evaluation index for the occurrence of postoperative complications. Results A total of 77 patients with esophageal cancer were included, including 59 (76.6%) males and 18 (23.4%) females aged 47-80 years. There were 42 (54.5%) patients in the non-complication group and 35 (45.5%) patients in the complication group. Univariate analysis results showed that the occurrence of postoperative complications was significantly correlated with age, body mass index (BMI), smoking index, tumor stage, the length of postoperative hospital stay, peak work rate (WRpeak), peak kilogram oxygen uptake (VO2peak/kg), the ventilatory equivalent for carbon dioxide slope (VE/VCO2 slope), forced expiratory volume in the first second/forced vital capacity (FEV1/FVC) and maximum expiratory flow rate (MMEF) (P<0.05). The results of multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that BMI [OR=1.35, 95%CI (1.03, 1.77), P=0.031], peakVO2/kg [OR=0.64, 95%CI (0.45, 0.93), P=0.018], oxygen uptake-anaerobic threshold (ATVO2) [OR=0.66, 95%CI (0.44, 0.98), P=0.044] and VE/VCO2 slope [OR=1.49, 95%CI (1.10, 2.02), P=0.011] were the related indexes of complications after radical resection of esophageal cancer. The sensitivity of BMI, VO2peak/kg, ATVO2/kg and VE/VCO2 slope in predicting postoperative complications was 82.10%, and the specificity was 87.44%, 95%CI (0.744, 0.955). Conclusion BMI, VO2peak/kg, ATVO2/kg and VE/VCO2 slope can be used as predictors for postoperative complications of esophageal cancer.

    Release date:2024-08-02 10:43 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Treatment experience of postoperative complications after laparoscopic pancreati- coduodenectomy

    ObjectiveTo investigate the occurrence and treatment of postoperative complications after laparoscopic laparoscopic pylorus-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy (LPPPD) or pancreaticoduodenectomy (LPD). MethodThe clinical data of 130 patients undergoing LPD from October 2010 to December 2015 in West China Hospital of Sichuan University were analyzed retrospectively. ResultsOf 130 patients, postoperative complications occurred in 55 cases, including 24 cases of pancreatic fistula, 14 cases of gastric emptying disorder, 3 cases of anastomotic bleeding, 6 cases of peritoneal infection, 1 case of bile leakage, 1 case of venous thrombosis, 1 case of chylous leakage, 5 cases of peritoneal effusion, without the occurrence of stress ulcer and incision complications. There were significant difference in the incidence of pancreatic fistula (P=0.025), gastric emptying disorder (P=0.034), anastomotic bleeding (P=0.020), and peritoneal infection (P=0.016) among prophase group, metaphase group, and the later stage group. ConclusionsThe most common complication after LPD is pancreatic fistula. With the improvement of surgical techniques and procedures, incidences of some postoperative complications decreases gradually.

    Release date:2017-07-12 02:01 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Association between occupation of patients with colorectal cancer and surgical difficulty and postoperative complications: a real-world study based on DACCA

    ObjectiveTo analyze the current version of the West China Database from Colorectal Cancer (DACCA) and explore how the occupational background of colorectal cancer patients affects the complexity of surgical difficulty and postoperative complications. MethodsWhen using the updated version of DACCA data on May 28, 2023 for analysis, the data items concerned covered occupation, operative duration, anatomical difficulty, pelvic stenosis, abdominal obesity, adhesion in surgical area, abnormal mesenteric status, tissue or organ hypertrophy, intestinal quality in surgical area, postoperative complications in hospital, short-term postoperative complications and long-term postoperative complications. According to the “Occupational Classification Code of the People’s Republic of China”, the occupations of patients were divided into professional and technical personnel, staff, service personal, production personnel, manufacturing personnel and retirees according to different occupations. The operative difficulty and postoperative complications of 6 groups were analyzed. ResultsAccording to the screening conditions, 5 734 valid data rows were obtained from DACCA. The results of occupation analysis showed that there were significant difference in operative duration (H=11.609, P=0.041), anatomical difficulty (H=29.166, P<0.001), pelvic stenosis (H=16.412, P=0.006), abdominal obesity (H=44.622, P<0.001), adhesion in surgical area (H=23.695, P<0.001), abnormal mesenteric status (χ2=39.252, P=0.035), tissue or organ hypertrophy (χ2=58.284, P<0.001) and intestinal quality in surgical area (H=21.041, P=0.001) between different groups. There were no significant differences in the occurrence of complications in hospital, near and short-term and long-term after operation among different occupations (P>0.05). Further subgroup analysis showed that only the difference of fever (χ2=10.969, P=0.041) and intestinal obstruction (χ2=12.025, P=0.021) were statistically significant among different occupations. ConclusionThe occupation of patients may affect the difficulty of colon cancer surgery, and the occurrence of postoperative complications is nothing to do with the occupation of patients, but the occurrence of postoperative fever and postoperative intestinal obstruction is related to occupations, and the possible causes need to be further explored.

    Release date:2024-11-27 02:52 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Application value of prognostic nutritional index in postoperative complications of da Vinci robotic McKeown surgery for esophageal cancer

    ObjectiveTo explore the application value of prognostic nutritional index (PNI) in the postoperative complications of McKeown surgery for da Vinci robotic esophageal cancer. MethodsThe clinical data of the patients who underwent da Vinci robotic McKeown surgery for esophageal cancer in the Department of Thoracic Surgery of the First Hospital of Lanzhou University from January 2019 to June 2022 were retrospectively collected. According to the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, the optimal cut-off value of PNI for predicting postoperative complications was explored. The patients were divided into a high PNI group and a low PNI group according to the cut-off value, and the differences in basic characteristics, surgery-related indexes and postoperative complications between the two groups were analyzed. According to the occurrence of postoperative complications, the patients were divided into a non-complication group and a complication group. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to explore the influence of relevant indicators on the occurrence of postoperative complications in da Vinci robotic McKeown surgery for esophageal cancer. ResultsFinally 120 patients were collected, including 95 males and 25 females, with an average age of 62.82 years. The preoperative hemoglobin content, preoperative blood lymphocyte count, preoperative serum albumin and preoperative blood total cholesterol in the high PNI group were higher than those in the low PNI group (P<0.05). There were statistical differences between the two groups in the incidences of postoperative overall complications, pulmonary infection, pleural effusion and poor incision healing (P<0.05). The relevant indicators that may cause postoperative complications were included in univariate analysis, and the results showed that age, operation time, intraoperative blood loss, preoperative blood lymphocyte count, preoperative hemoglobin content, preoperative blood mononuclear cell count, preoperative blood monocyte count, serum albumin level and PNI were possible influencing factors of postoperative complications after da Vinci robotic McKeown surgery for esophageal cancer. Incorporating these influencing factors into multivariate analysis, the results showed that age, PNI, operation time and intraoperative blood loss were independent influencing factors of postoperative complications. ConclusionPNI has certain predictive value in the postoperative complications of da Vinci robotic McKeown surgery for esophageal cancer. PNI is an independent factor affecting postoperative complications. Improving the level of PNI in esophageal cancer patient before surgery may help reduce the occurrence of postoperative complications.

    Release date:2024-02-20 04:11 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Efficacy of transthoracic device closure versus traditional surgical repair on atrial septal defects: A systematic review and meta-analysis

    ObjectiveTo compare the effects of transthoracic device closure and traditional surgical repair on atrial septal defect systemically.MethodsA systematic literature search was conducted using the PubMed, EMbase, The Cochrane Library, VIP, CNKI, CBM, Wanfang Database up to July 31, 2018 to identify trials according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria. Quality was assessed and data of included articles were extracted. The meta-analysis was conducted by RevMan 5.3 and Stata 12.0 software.ResultsThirty studies were identified, including 3 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and 27 cohort studies involving 3 321 patients. For success rate, the transthoracic closure group was lower than that in the surgical repair group (CCT, OR=0.34, 95%CI 0.16 to 0.69, P=0.003). There was no statistical difference in mortality between the two groups (CCT, OR=0.43, 95%CI 0.12 to 1.52, P=0.19). Postoperative complication occurred less frequently in the transthoracic closure group than that in the surgical repair group (RCT, OR=0.30, 95%CI 0.12 to 0.77, P=0.01; CCT, OR=0.27, 95%CI 0.17 to 0.42, P<0.000 01). The risk of postoperative arrhythmia in the transthoracic closure group was lower than that in the surgical repair group (CCT, OR=0.56, 95%CI 0.34 to 0.90, P=0.02). There was no statistical difference in the incidence of postoperative residual shunt in postoperative one month (CCT, OR=4.52, 95%CI 0.45 to 45.82, P=0.20) and in postoperative one year (CCT, OR=1.03, 95%CI 0.29 to 3.68, P=0.97) between the two groups. Although the duration of operation (RCT MD=–55.90, 95%CI –58.69 to –53.11, P<0.000 01; CCT MD=–71.68, 95%CI –79.70 to –63.66, P<0.000 01), hospital stay (CCT, MD=–3.31, 95%CI –4.16, –2.46, P<0.000 01) and ICU stay(CCT, MD=–10.15, 95%CI –14.38 to –5.91, P<0.000 01), mechanical ventilation (CCT, MD=–228.68, 95%CI –247.60 to –209.77, P<0.000 01) in the transthoracic closure group were lower than those in the traditional surgical repair group, the transthoracic closure costed more than traditional surgical repair during being in the hospital (CCT, MD=1 221.42, 95%CI 1 124.70 to 1 318.14, P<0.000 01).ConclusionCompared with traditional surgical repair, the transthoracic closure reduces the hospital stay, shortens the length of ICU stay and the duration of ventilator assisted ventilation, while has less postoperative complications. It is safe and reliable for patients with ASD within the scope of indication.

    Release date:2019-07-17 04:28 Export PDF Favorites Scan
  • Clinical characteristics and treatment experience of severe complications after thoracic surgery—ten-year outcome from a single center

    ObjectiveTo discuss the clinical characteristics and the management of major complications after thoracic surgery.MethodsRetrospective research was conducted on 15 213 patients who underwent thoracic surgery from January 2008 to September 2018 in our hospital. Thirty-six (0.24%) patients died of postoperative complications. Based on whether major complications such as severe pulmonary pneumonia and other 13 complications were presented postoperatively, the patients were divided into a complication group (n=389, 294 males and 95 females, aged 61.93±10.23 years) and a non-complication group (n=14 785, 8 636 males and 6 149 females, aged 55.27±13.21 years) after exclusion of unqualified patients. The age, gender distribution, diagnosis, surgical approach, postoperative hospital stay, in-hospital costs and other clinical data were analyzed. And the treatment and outcomes of the complications were summarized.ResultsThe age, proportion of male, malignancy and esophageal diseases, postoperative hospital stay and in-hospital costs in the complication group were significantly more or higher than those in the non-complication group (P<0.05). The top three causes of death among the 36 deaths were pulmonary embolism (PE, 25.00%), severe pulmonary pneumonia (16.67%) and acute respiratory failure (16.67%), respectively. The top five complications among the severe complication group were pulmonary pneumonia (24.73%), pleural space (19.83%), anastomotic leak (17.48%), pulmonary atelectasis (11.51%) and PE (6.18%).ConclusionThoracic surgeons should recognize patients with high risk of severe complications preoperatively based on clinical characteristics and perform multi-disciplinary treatment for severe complications.

    Release date:2019-08-12 03:01 Export PDF Favorites Scan
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