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Rethinking preop testing
ORLANDO – Michael Rothberg, MD, a nocturnist who works at Presbyterian Rust Medical Center in Albuquerque, often is torn when asked to routinely perform preoperative tests, such as ECGs, on patients.
On the one hand, Dr. Rothberg knows that for many patients there is almost certainly no benefit to some of the tests. On the other hand, surgeons expect the tests to be performed – so, for the sake of collegiality, patients often have tests ordered that hospitalists suspect are unnecessary.
This was a big part of why Dr. Rothberg decided to come a day early to HM18, held in early April in Orlando, to attend the pre-course “Essentials of Perioperative Medicine and Co-Management for the Hospitalist.” He was looking for expert guidance on which patients need what tests before surgery, and also how to better determine what preoperative tests are a waste of time and money for certain patients, so that he’ll be armed with useful information when he went back to his medical center.
“I can slap something on the surgeon’s desk and say, ‘Here’s why we’re not doing it,’ ” Dr. Rothberg said.
At the HM18 pre-course, experts gave guidance on the benefits of hospitalist involvement in perioperative care and offered points to consider when assessing cardiac and pulmonary risk before surgeries. Hospitalists then broke into groups to brainstorm techniques that could improve their perioperative work.
Pre-course director Rachel Thompson, MD, MPH, SFHM, head of the section of hospital medicine at the University of Nebraska in Omaha, pointed to the enormous swath of surgical care that could benefit from hospitalist involvement. In the United States, at least 52 million surgeries a year are performed, with 9 surgical procedures per lifetime on average. Of the 50,000 hospitalists in the United States, 87% are involved in preoperative care, she said.
She noted how surgical safety checklists have been shown to improve morbidity and mortality, as seen with a checklist developed by the World Health Organization and in California, where an enhanced recovery program at 20 hospitals has been successful.
“I think the reason we see changes in each of those … from pre to post when they implement, is because people start to communicate and collaborate,” she said. “I think that’s the secret sauce, and you can take that back home with you.”
Assessing risk
Paul Grant, MD, SFHM, codirector of the perioperative medicine pre-course, said that risk assessment is a crucial part of hospitalists’ role, and although risk calculators are available, “they’re not perfect – in fact, it’s important to think about using them very individualized for your patient.” Dr. Grant has begun using the Frailty Risk Analysis Index more often in his own work as director of the consultative and perioperative medicine program at Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, since frailty has been shown to be such a telltale indicator of perioperative risk.
As for preoperative testing, history is replete with examples of tests once considered crucial but that have proven to be unimportant for many patients, including preoperative carotid endarterectomy, preop ECG, preop coronary revasularization, and preop lab work.
“I was always listening for bruits years ago,” Dr. Grant said. “I’ve sort of stopped doing that now. You’ll hear it, you won’t know what to do with it. We used to take care of those things before surgery. We now know that’s not helpful for patients without symptoms.”
Steven Cohn, MD, SFHM, director of the medical consultation service at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, reviewed cardiac risk assessment in noncardiac procedures. He cautioned that the Revised Cardiac Risk Assessment was created based on patients with lengths of stay of at least 2 days and shouldn’t be used for low-risk or ambulatory procedures because it will overestimate the risk.
Dr. Cohn’s philosophy is to not suggest a delay without firm evidence that it is necessary. “I try not to interfere with surgery unless I feel that there is significant risk,” he said.
In workshop discussions at the HM18 pre-course, hospitalists considered their contributions to preoperative care and ways they might be able to contribute more effectively. Among their ideas were better communication with anesthesiology – regarded as severely lacking by many hospitalists in the session – as well as designating smaller perioperative teams to foster knowledge and greater trust with surgeons.
Aron Mednick, MD, FHM, director of the comanagement service at Tisch Hospital, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, said his group talked about an “identify, mitigate, propose, and resolve” method – identifying services or conditions with a high rate of preoperative problems, finding data on how to solve them, and proposing ways to get hospitalists involved in the solution.
“We noted that a lot of people experience resistance with getting hospitalists involved in care early,” he said. “So one of the ways to do this is actually to identify problems and start above the surgeon, at the CMO and COO level, and then move down through department chairs and, basically, impose our existence on the care of the patient.”
ORLANDO – Michael Rothberg, MD, a nocturnist who works at Presbyterian Rust Medical Center in Albuquerque, often is torn when asked to routinely perform preoperative tests, such as ECGs, on patients.
On the one hand, Dr. Rothberg knows that for many patients there is almost certainly no benefit to some of the tests. On the other hand, surgeons expect the tests to be performed – so, for the sake of collegiality, patients often have tests ordered that hospitalists suspect are unnecessary.
This was a big part of why Dr. Rothberg decided to come a day early to HM18, held in early April in Orlando, to attend the pre-course “Essentials of Perioperative Medicine and Co-Management for the Hospitalist.” He was looking for expert guidance on which patients need what tests before surgery, and also how to better determine what preoperative tests are a waste of time and money for certain patients, so that he’ll be armed with useful information when he went back to his medical center.
“I can slap something on the surgeon’s desk and say, ‘Here’s why we’re not doing it,’ ” Dr. Rothberg said.
At the HM18 pre-course, experts gave guidance on the benefits of hospitalist involvement in perioperative care and offered points to consider when assessing cardiac and pulmonary risk before surgeries. Hospitalists then broke into groups to brainstorm techniques that could improve their perioperative work.
Pre-course director Rachel Thompson, MD, MPH, SFHM, head of the section of hospital medicine at the University of Nebraska in Omaha, pointed to the enormous swath of surgical care that could benefit from hospitalist involvement. In the United States, at least 52 million surgeries a year are performed, with 9 surgical procedures per lifetime on average. Of the 50,000 hospitalists in the United States, 87% are involved in preoperative care, she said.
She noted how surgical safety checklists have been shown to improve morbidity and mortality, as seen with a checklist developed by the World Health Organization and in California, where an enhanced recovery program at 20 hospitals has been successful.
“I think the reason we see changes in each of those … from pre to post when they implement, is because people start to communicate and collaborate,” she said. “I think that’s the secret sauce, and you can take that back home with you.”
Assessing risk
Paul Grant, MD, SFHM, codirector of the perioperative medicine pre-course, said that risk assessment is a crucial part of hospitalists’ role, and although risk calculators are available, “they’re not perfect – in fact, it’s important to think about using them very individualized for your patient.” Dr. Grant has begun using the Frailty Risk Analysis Index more often in his own work as director of the consultative and perioperative medicine program at Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, since frailty has been shown to be such a telltale indicator of perioperative risk.
As for preoperative testing, history is replete with examples of tests once considered crucial but that have proven to be unimportant for many patients, including preoperative carotid endarterectomy, preop ECG, preop coronary revasularization, and preop lab work.
“I was always listening for bruits years ago,” Dr. Grant said. “I’ve sort of stopped doing that now. You’ll hear it, you won’t know what to do with it. We used to take care of those things before surgery. We now know that’s not helpful for patients without symptoms.”
Steven Cohn, MD, SFHM, director of the medical consultation service at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, reviewed cardiac risk assessment in noncardiac procedures. He cautioned that the Revised Cardiac Risk Assessment was created based on patients with lengths of stay of at least 2 days and shouldn’t be used for low-risk or ambulatory procedures because it will overestimate the risk.
Dr. Cohn’s philosophy is to not suggest a delay without firm evidence that it is necessary. “I try not to interfere with surgery unless I feel that there is significant risk,” he said.
In workshop discussions at the HM18 pre-course, hospitalists considered their contributions to preoperative care and ways they might be able to contribute more effectively. Among their ideas were better communication with anesthesiology – regarded as severely lacking by many hospitalists in the session – as well as designating smaller perioperative teams to foster knowledge and greater trust with surgeons.
Aron Mednick, MD, FHM, director of the comanagement service at Tisch Hospital, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, said his group talked about an “identify, mitigate, propose, and resolve” method – identifying services or conditions with a high rate of preoperative problems, finding data on how to solve them, and proposing ways to get hospitalists involved in the solution.
“We noted that a lot of people experience resistance with getting hospitalists involved in care early,” he said. “So one of the ways to do this is actually to identify problems and start above the surgeon, at the CMO and COO level, and then move down through department chairs and, basically, impose our existence on the care of the patient.”
ORLANDO – Michael Rothberg, MD, a nocturnist who works at Presbyterian Rust Medical Center in Albuquerque, often is torn when asked to routinely perform preoperative tests, such as ECGs, on patients.
On the one hand, Dr. Rothberg knows that for many patients there is almost certainly no benefit to some of the tests. On the other hand, surgeons expect the tests to be performed – so, for the sake of collegiality, patients often have tests ordered that hospitalists suspect are unnecessary.
This was a big part of why Dr. Rothberg decided to come a day early to HM18, held in early April in Orlando, to attend the pre-course “Essentials of Perioperative Medicine and Co-Management for the Hospitalist.” He was looking for expert guidance on which patients need what tests before surgery, and also how to better determine what preoperative tests are a waste of time and money for certain patients, so that he’ll be armed with useful information when he went back to his medical center.
“I can slap something on the surgeon’s desk and say, ‘Here’s why we’re not doing it,’ ” Dr. Rothberg said.
At the HM18 pre-course, experts gave guidance on the benefits of hospitalist involvement in perioperative care and offered points to consider when assessing cardiac and pulmonary risk before surgeries. Hospitalists then broke into groups to brainstorm techniques that could improve their perioperative work.
Pre-course director Rachel Thompson, MD, MPH, SFHM, head of the section of hospital medicine at the University of Nebraska in Omaha, pointed to the enormous swath of surgical care that could benefit from hospitalist involvement. In the United States, at least 52 million surgeries a year are performed, with 9 surgical procedures per lifetime on average. Of the 50,000 hospitalists in the United States, 87% are involved in preoperative care, she said.
She noted how surgical safety checklists have been shown to improve morbidity and mortality, as seen with a checklist developed by the World Health Organization and in California, where an enhanced recovery program at 20 hospitals has been successful.
“I think the reason we see changes in each of those … from pre to post when they implement, is because people start to communicate and collaborate,” she said. “I think that’s the secret sauce, and you can take that back home with you.”
Assessing risk
Paul Grant, MD, SFHM, codirector of the perioperative medicine pre-course, said that risk assessment is a crucial part of hospitalists’ role, and although risk calculators are available, “they’re not perfect – in fact, it’s important to think about using them very individualized for your patient.” Dr. Grant has begun using the Frailty Risk Analysis Index more often in his own work as director of the consultative and perioperative medicine program at Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, since frailty has been shown to be such a telltale indicator of perioperative risk.
As for preoperative testing, history is replete with examples of tests once considered crucial but that have proven to be unimportant for many patients, including preoperative carotid endarterectomy, preop ECG, preop coronary revasularization, and preop lab work.
“I was always listening for bruits years ago,” Dr. Grant said. “I’ve sort of stopped doing that now. You’ll hear it, you won’t know what to do with it. We used to take care of those things before surgery. We now know that’s not helpful for patients without symptoms.”
Steven Cohn, MD, SFHM, director of the medical consultation service at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami, reviewed cardiac risk assessment in noncardiac procedures. He cautioned that the Revised Cardiac Risk Assessment was created based on patients with lengths of stay of at least 2 days and shouldn’t be used for low-risk or ambulatory procedures because it will overestimate the risk.
Dr. Cohn’s philosophy is to not suggest a delay without firm evidence that it is necessary. “I try not to interfere with surgery unless I feel that there is significant risk,” he said.
In workshop discussions at the HM18 pre-course, hospitalists considered their contributions to preoperative care and ways they might be able to contribute more effectively. Among their ideas were better communication with anesthesiology – regarded as severely lacking by many hospitalists in the session – as well as designating smaller perioperative teams to foster knowledge and greater trust with surgeons.
Aron Mednick, MD, FHM, director of the comanagement service at Tisch Hospital, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, said his group talked about an “identify, mitigate, propose, and resolve” method – identifying services or conditions with a high rate of preoperative problems, finding data on how to solve them, and proposing ways to get hospitalists involved in the solution.
“We noted that a lot of people experience resistance with getting hospitalists involved in care early,” he said. “So one of the ways to do this is actually to identify problems and start above the surgeon, at the CMO and COO level, and then move down through department chairs and, basically, impose our existence on the care of the patient.”
REPORTING FROM HM18
Opioids still overprescribed for postop pain management
Most patients use far less opioids than they are prescribed after hernia and other abdominal surgery, resulting in substantial waste and potential diversion, a prospective cohort study has found.
In an evaluation of 176 narcotic-naive patients who underwent surgery in a Wen Hui Tan, MD, and her research team at Washington University, St. Louis. The report was published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.
Overall, 76.7% of patients reported being satisfied or very satisfied with their postoperative pain management. Some patients (n = 31, 17.6%) reported not filling their prescription or not taking any of their prescribed opioid pain medications at all.
Sixty-nine percent of the surgeries were laparoscopic. A variety of abdominal procedures were represented, including hiatal hernia repair, inguinal hernia repair, and cholecystectomy. The median age was 60 years. Of postoperative pain prescriptions, 67% were for hydrocodone-acetaminophen and most of the remainder were for oxycodone-acetaminophen or oxycodone alone. The median prescription was for the equivalent of 20 5-mg oxycodone pills, while the median consumption in the first 7 postoperative days was 3.7 pills. Only 4.5% of patients received a refill.
The findings are consistent with numerous studies of different types of operations showing that patients often don’t use all of the opioid medications they are prescribed for pain control after surgery.
“Now that opioid pain medications can no longer be refilled with a pharmacy via telephone, overprescription may also be partially driven by a desire to prevent future inconvenience and workload of office staff from patients requesting refills. However, the rising numbers of opioid-related unintentional deaths over the last decade point to the fact that overprescription has serious potential consequences,” the researchers wrote.
They reported having no potential conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: Tan et al. J Am Coll Surg 2018 May 7. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.032.
Most patients use far less opioids than they are prescribed after hernia and other abdominal surgery, resulting in substantial waste and potential diversion, a prospective cohort study has found.
In an evaluation of 176 narcotic-naive patients who underwent surgery in a Wen Hui Tan, MD, and her research team at Washington University, St. Louis. The report was published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.
Overall, 76.7% of patients reported being satisfied or very satisfied with their postoperative pain management. Some patients (n = 31, 17.6%) reported not filling their prescription or not taking any of their prescribed opioid pain medications at all.
Sixty-nine percent of the surgeries were laparoscopic. A variety of abdominal procedures were represented, including hiatal hernia repair, inguinal hernia repair, and cholecystectomy. The median age was 60 years. Of postoperative pain prescriptions, 67% were for hydrocodone-acetaminophen and most of the remainder were for oxycodone-acetaminophen or oxycodone alone. The median prescription was for the equivalent of 20 5-mg oxycodone pills, while the median consumption in the first 7 postoperative days was 3.7 pills. Only 4.5% of patients received a refill.
The findings are consistent with numerous studies of different types of operations showing that patients often don’t use all of the opioid medications they are prescribed for pain control after surgery.
“Now that opioid pain medications can no longer be refilled with a pharmacy via telephone, overprescription may also be partially driven by a desire to prevent future inconvenience and workload of office staff from patients requesting refills. However, the rising numbers of opioid-related unintentional deaths over the last decade point to the fact that overprescription has serious potential consequences,” the researchers wrote.
They reported having no potential conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: Tan et al. J Am Coll Surg 2018 May 7. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.032.
Most patients use far less opioids than they are prescribed after hernia and other abdominal surgery, resulting in substantial waste and potential diversion, a prospective cohort study has found.
In an evaluation of 176 narcotic-naive patients who underwent surgery in a Wen Hui Tan, MD, and her research team at Washington University, St. Louis. The report was published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons.
Overall, 76.7% of patients reported being satisfied or very satisfied with their postoperative pain management. Some patients (n = 31, 17.6%) reported not filling their prescription or not taking any of their prescribed opioid pain medications at all.
Sixty-nine percent of the surgeries were laparoscopic. A variety of abdominal procedures were represented, including hiatal hernia repair, inguinal hernia repair, and cholecystectomy. The median age was 60 years. Of postoperative pain prescriptions, 67% were for hydrocodone-acetaminophen and most of the remainder were for oxycodone-acetaminophen or oxycodone alone. The median prescription was for the equivalent of 20 5-mg oxycodone pills, while the median consumption in the first 7 postoperative days was 3.7 pills. Only 4.5% of patients received a refill.
The findings are consistent with numerous studies of different types of operations showing that patients often don’t use all of the opioid medications they are prescribed for pain control after surgery.
“Now that opioid pain medications can no longer be refilled with a pharmacy via telephone, overprescription may also be partially driven by a desire to prevent future inconvenience and workload of office staff from patients requesting refills. However, the rising numbers of opioid-related unintentional deaths over the last decade point to the fact that overprescription has serious potential consequences,” the researchers wrote.
They reported having no potential conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: Tan et al. J Am Coll Surg 2018 May 7. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.032.
FROM THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS
Key clinical point: For postoperative recovery, a survey showed that far more opioids are prescribed than are consumed.
Major finding: On average, surgical patients went home with opioid prescriptions of 150 MME but took a median of 30 MME.
Study details: Prospective cohort study.
Disclosures: The authors report no potential conflicts of interest.
Source: Tan et al. J Am Coll Surg 2018 May 7. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.032.
Hospital safety program curbs surgical site infections
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) designed the program to reduce surgical site infections (SSIs), which are harmful to patients and expensive for the health care system, wrote Della M. Lin, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and the department of surgery at the University of Hawaii, Honolulu, and her colleagues.
In a study published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons, the researchers reviewed data from a statewide intervention conducted at 15 hospitals in Hawaii from January 2013 to June 2015. The intervention included the Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program and individualized interventions for each hospital to help reduce SSIs. The primary outcome was the number of colorectal SSIs. A secondary outcome of hospital safety culture was assessed using the AHRQ Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture. The participating hospitals ranged from a 25-bed critical-access hospital to a 533-bed academic medical center.
Overall, the colorectal SSI rate decreased significantly (from 12% to 5%) from the first quarter of 2013 to the second quarter of 2015, with a significant linear decrease over the study period. The rate of superficial SSIs decreased significantly, falling from 8% to 3%. However, the rate of deep SSIs was not significantly different before and after the intervention program (2% vs. 0%), nor was the organ space SSI rate (3% vs. 2%). The standardized infection ratio decreased from 1.83 to 0.92.
The culture of safety in the hospitals improved, but more modestly, in 10 of 12 areas that were measured over the study period.
The overall perception of patient safety improved from 49% to 53%, teamwork across different units improved from 49% to 54%, management and support for patient safety improved from 53% to 60%, and nonpunitive response to errors improved from 36% to 40%.
In addition, communication and openness improved from 50% to 53%, frequency of reported events improved from 51% to 60%, feedback and communication about errors improved from 52% to 59%, organizational learning and continuous improvement increased from 59% to 70%, teamwork within units improved from 68% to 75%, and expectations and actions by supervisors and managers to promote safety improved from 58% to 64%. Staff responses reflect agreement on improvement in the areas of issues of communication, feedback mechanisms, and teamwork, but the change in culture was not on the order of the SSI change.
The most common interventions to reduce SSIs were the use of reliable chlorhexidine wash or wipe before surgery/surgical prep; appropriate use of antibiotics with respect to selection, dosage, and timing; standardized postsurgical debriefing; and differentiating clean/dirty/clean in the use of anastomosis trays and closing trays.
One bundle component, the implementation of the standard operating room debrief, was found to be of particular value to participants. The investigators noted that debrief questions such as “What went well?” and “What needs to be improved?” had “encouraged new processes of thinking beyond first-order problem solving. The debrief challenge embraced by the teams emphasized that ‘bundles’ did not consist of only technical interventions [e.g. clean/dirty trays, chlorhexidine gluconate wipes in preop], but embedded culture interventions—new processes for problem solving.”
The study findings were limited by several factors, such as the use of public SSI data that were not audited for accuracy and the inability to monitor the reliability of the implementation of the various interventions, the researchers said. In addition, “In this current study, there was a change in SSI rates and a change in safety culture, but correlations between the two were negligible or weak for most domains of safety culture,” they noted. The question of sustainability of the SSI improvement without the concomitant staff support of culture change was not addressed by the investigators.
However, the results suggest that a 62% decrease is robust, and that for some hospitals with a low volume of colorectal cases, “teams could attend to iteratively reduce surgical harm beyond SSI,” the researchers wrote.
The study was supported in part by the AHRQ. Dr. Lin disclosed serving as a board member and as a paid independent contractor to the Hawaii Medical Service Association. Her coauthors had no financial conflicts to disclose.
SOURCE: Lin DM et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2018 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.031.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) designed the program to reduce surgical site infections (SSIs), which are harmful to patients and expensive for the health care system, wrote Della M. Lin, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and the department of surgery at the University of Hawaii, Honolulu, and her colleagues.
In a study published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons, the researchers reviewed data from a statewide intervention conducted at 15 hospitals in Hawaii from January 2013 to June 2015. The intervention included the Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program and individualized interventions for each hospital to help reduce SSIs. The primary outcome was the number of colorectal SSIs. A secondary outcome of hospital safety culture was assessed using the AHRQ Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture. The participating hospitals ranged from a 25-bed critical-access hospital to a 533-bed academic medical center.
Overall, the colorectal SSI rate decreased significantly (from 12% to 5%) from the first quarter of 2013 to the second quarter of 2015, with a significant linear decrease over the study period. The rate of superficial SSIs decreased significantly, falling from 8% to 3%. However, the rate of deep SSIs was not significantly different before and after the intervention program (2% vs. 0%), nor was the organ space SSI rate (3% vs. 2%). The standardized infection ratio decreased from 1.83 to 0.92.
The culture of safety in the hospitals improved, but more modestly, in 10 of 12 areas that were measured over the study period.
The overall perception of patient safety improved from 49% to 53%, teamwork across different units improved from 49% to 54%, management and support for patient safety improved from 53% to 60%, and nonpunitive response to errors improved from 36% to 40%.
In addition, communication and openness improved from 50% to 53%, frequency of reported events improved from 51% to 60%, feedback and communication about errors improved from 52% to 59%, organizational learning and continuous improvement increased from 59% to 70%, teamwork within units improved from 68% to 75%, and expectations and actions by supervisors and managers to promote safety improved from 58% to 64%. Staff responses reflect agreement on improvement in the areas of issues of communication, feedback mechanisms, and teamwork, but the change in culture was not on the order of the SSI change.
The most common interventions to reduce SSIs were the use of reliable chlorhexidine wash or wipe before surgery/surgical prep; appropriate use of antibiotics with respect to selection, dosage, and timing; standardized postsurgical debriefing; and differentiating clean/dirty/clean in the use of anastomosis trays and closing trays.
One bundle component, the implementation of the standard operating room debrief, was found to be of particular value to participants. The investigators noted that debrief questions such as “What went well?” and “What needs to be improved?” had “encouraged new processes of thinking beyond first-order problem solving. The debrief challenge embraced by the teams emphasized that ‘bundles’ did not consist of only technical interventions [e.g. clean/dirty trays, chlorhexidine gluconate wipes in preop], but embedded culture interventions—new processes for problem solving.”
The study findings were limited by several factors, such as the use of public SSI data that were not audited for accuracy and the inability to monitor the reliability of the implementation of the various interventions, the researchers said. In addition, “In this current study, there was a change in SSI rates and a change in safety culture, but correlations between the two were negligible or weak for most domains of safety culture,” they noted. The question of sustainability of the SSI improvement without the concomitant staff support of culture change was not addressed by the investigators.
However, the results suggest that a 62% decrease is robust, and that for some hospitals with a low volume of colorectal cases, “teams could attend to iteratively reduce surgical harm beyond SSI,” the researchers wrote.
The study was supported in part by the AHRQ. Dr. Lin disclosed serving as a board member and as a paid independent contractor to the Hawaii Medical Service Association. Her coauthors had no financial conflicts to disclose.
SOURCE: Lin DM et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2018 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.031.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) designed the program to reduce surgical site infections (SSIs), which are harmful to patients and expensive for the health care system, wrote Della M. Lin, MD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and the department of surgery at the University of Hawaii, Honolulu, and her colleagues.
In a study published in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons, the researchers reviewed data from a statewide intervention conducted at 15 hospitals in Hawaii from January 2013 to June 2015. The intervention included the Comprehensive Unit-based Safety Program and individualized interventions for each hospital to help reduce SSIs. The primary outcome was the number of colorectal SSIs. A secondary outcome of hospital safety culture was assessed using the AHRQ Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture. The participating hospitals ranged from a 25-bed critical-access hospital to a 533-bed academic medical center.
Overall, the colorectal SSI rate decreased significantly (from 12% to 5%) from the first quarter of 2013 to the second quarter of 2015, with a significant linear decrease over the study period. The rate of superficial SSIs decreased significantly, falling from 8% to 3%. However, the rate of deep SSIs was not significantly different before and after the intervention program (2% vs. 0%), nor was the organ space SSI rate (3% vs. 2%). The standardized infection ratio decreased from 1.83 to 0.92.
The culture of safety in the hospitals improved, but more modestly, in 10 of 12 areas that were measured over the study period.
The overall perception of patient safety improved from 49% to 53%, teamwork across different units improved from 49% to 54%, management and support for patient safety improved from 53% to 60%, and nonpunitive response to errors improved from 36% to 40%.
In addition, communication and openness improved from 50% to 53%, frequency of reported events improved from 51% to 60%, feedback and communication about errors improved from 52% to 59%, organizational learning and continuous improvement increased from 59% to 70%, teamwork within units improved from 68% to 75%, and expectations and actions by supervisors and managers to promote safety improved from 58% to 64%. Staff responses reflect agreement on improvement in the areas of issues of communication, feedback mechanisms, and teamwork, but the change in culture was not on the order of the SSI change.
The most common interventions to reduce SSIs were the use of reliable chlorhexidine wash or wipe before surgery/surgical prep; appropriate use of antibiotics with respect to selection, dosage, and timing; standardized postsurgical debriefing; and differentiating clean/dirty/clean in the use of anastomosis trays and closing trays.
One bundle component, the implementation of the standard operating room debrief, was found to be of particular value to participants. The investigators noted that debrief questions such as “What went well?” and “What needs to be improved?” had “encouraged new processes of thinking beyond first-order problem solving. The debrief challenge embraced by the teams emphasized that ‘bundles’ did not consist of only technical interventions [e.g. clean/dirty trays, chlorhexidine gluconate wipes in preop], but embedded culture interventions—new processes for problem solving.”
The study findings were limited by several factors, such as the use of public SSI data that were not audited for accuracy and the inability to monitor the reliability of the implementation of the various interventions, the researchers said. In addition, “In this current study, there was a change in SSI rates and a change in safety culture, but correlations between the two were negligible or weak for most domains of safety culture,” they noted. The question of sustainability of the SSI improvement without the concomitant staff support of culture change was not addressed by the investigators.
However, the results suggest that a 62% decrease is robust, and that for some hospitals with a low volume of colorectal cases, “teams could attend to iteratively reduce surgical harm beyond SSI,” the researchers wrote.
The study was supported in part by the AHRQ. Dr. Lin disclosed serving as a board member and as a paid independent contractor to the Hawaii Medical Service Association. Her coauthors had no financial conflicts to disclose.
SOURCE: Lin DM et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2018 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.031.
FROM THE JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS
Key clinical point: Hospital participation in an Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality safety program improved safety culture and reduced surgical site infections.
Major finding: Surgical site infections among colorectal surgery patients decreased by 61.7% after the intervention.
Study details: The data come from a cohort study of 15 hospitals in Hawaii from January 2013 to June 2015.
Disclosures: The study was supported in part by the AHRQ. Dr. Lin disclosed serving as a board member and as a paid independent contractor to the Hawaii Medical Service Association. Her coauthors had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Source: Lin DM et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2018 May 18. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.04.031.
Postop delirium management proposed as hospital performance measure
A study suggests that
outcome measures, and assessment of hospital performance.Lead author Julia R. Berian, MD, of the University of Chicago Medical Center and her colleagues wrote, “Postoperative delirium has been associated with mortality, morbidity, prolonged length of stay, and increased costs of care. Furthermore, postoperative delirium may be associated with long-term cognitive and functional decline. However, postoperative delirium has not been incorporated as an outcome measure into major surgical quality registries. Approximately one-third of hospitalized delirium is believed to be preventable, making postoperative delirium an ideal target for surgical quality improvement efforts,” Dr. Berian and her colleagues reported in the Annals of Surgery.
The investigators analyzed medical records from elderly patients at 30 hospitals using data from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) Geriatric Surgery Pilot Project for whom postoperative delirium status was ascertained as a binary outcome. The Geriatric Surgery Pilot Project collects and studies novel, geriatric-specific variables on patients aged 65 years and older to include in the NSQIP. The team’s study sample included 20,212 patients aged 65 years and older undergoing surgeries from Jan. 1, 2014, through Dec. 31, 2015. Investigators used hierarchical logistic regression models adjusted for case mix and patient risk factors to measure for hospital performance on managing postoperative delirium in elderly patients. Model performance was then assessed with Hosmer-Lemeshow test and C-statistics, and compared across surgical specialties.
The Geriatric Surgery Pilot data abstractors were instructed to assign postoperative delirium if the medical record words indicating an acute confusional stat such a mental status change, confusion, disorientation, agitation, delirium, and inappropriate behavior. Data were collected from the period 2 hours after surgery to exclude effects of the pharmacologic agents of anesthesia. Delirium status was ascertained as a binary outcome (Yes/No).
Postoperative delirium was observed in 2,427 patients for an average, unadjusted rate of 12.0%. Investigators identified 20 risk factors markedly associated with delirium. The strongest predictors included preoperative cognitive impairment, preoperative use of mobility aid, surrogate consent form, ASA class 4 or greater, age 80 years and older, preoperative sepsis, and fall history within 1 year. Patients with delirium generally were older than patients without delirium were and accounted for a greater proportion of emergency cases. Postoperative hospital length of stay was about 4 days longer on average for patients with delirium, compared with those without delirium.
By specialty, the highest rates of postoperative delirium occurred following cardiothoracic (13.7%), orthopedic (13.0%), and general surgeries (13.0%). Study authors found varied associated risk for postoperative delirium within each surgical specialty. For example, in general surgery, the risk for postoperative delirium with partial mastectomy was low, compared with a mid-level risk in the repair of a recurrent, incarcerated, or strangulated inguinal hernia and a high-level risk in Whipple operations.
The model developed to measure delirium management success in 30 hospitals found that adjusted delirium rates ranged from 3.2% to 27.5%, with eight poor- and five excellent-performing outliers. Authors noted that their model demonstrated good calibration and discrimination. Examination of changes in the Bayesian Information Criteria indicates that as few as 10-12 variables may suffice in building a parsimonious model with “an excellent fit.”
Study authors noted that screening for postoperative delirium in older adults is likely in the best interests of patients. However, they also mentioned that such screening may identify cases of postoperative delirium that were previously unrecognized, resulting in higher rates. In addition, the inclusion of only ACS NSQIP hospitals and the voluntary participation may mean a biased dataset. No one delirium prevention intervention was implemented across the hospitals and so the study doesn’t indicate why some hospitals are more successful than are others. Chart-based identification of patients who have delirium needs further study to assess validity.
Authors concluded that one solution may be to “standardize and consistently employ delirium screening in high-risk patients across hospitals, as has been advocated by a coalition of interdisciplinary experts in geriatric care.”
This project is funded in part by a grant from the John A. Hartford Foundation. The authors declare no conflict of interests.
SOURCE: Berlan JR et al. Ann Surg. 2017 July 24. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000002436
A study suggests that
outcome measures, and assessment of hospital performance.Lead author Julia R. Berian, MD, of the University of Chicago Medical Center and her colleagues wrote, “Postoperative delirium has been associated with mortality, morbidity, prolonged length of stay, and increased costs of care. Furthermore, postoperative delirium may be associated with long-term cognitive and functional decline. However, postoperative delirium has not been incorporated as an outcome measure into major surgical quality registries. Approximately one-third of hospitalized delirium is believed to be preventable, making postoperative delirium an ideal target for surgical quality improvement efforts,” Dr. Berian and her colleagues reported in the Annals of Surgery.
The investigators analyzed medical records from elderly patients at 30 hospitals using data from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) Geriatric Surgery Pilot Project for whom postoperative delirium status was ascertained as a binary outcome. The Geriatric Surgery Pilot Project collects and studies novel, geriatric-specific variables on patients aged 65 years and older to include in the NSQIP. The team’s study sample included 20,212 patients aged 65 years and older undergoing surgeries from Jan. 1, 2014, through Dec. 31, 2015. Investigators used hierarchical logistic regression models adjusted for case mix and patient risk factors to measure for hospital performance on managing postoperative delirium in elderly patients. Model performance was then assessed with Hosmer-Lemeshow test and C-statistics, and compared across surgical specialties.
The Geriatric Surgery Pilot data abstractors were instructed to assign postoperative delirium if the medical record words indicating an acute confusional stat such a mental status change, confusion, disorientation, agitation, delirium, and inappropriate behavior. Data were collected from the period 2 hours after surgery to exclude effects of the pharmacologic agents of anesthesia. Delirium status was ascertained as a binary outcome (Yes/No).
Postoperative delirium was observed in 2,427 patients for an average, unadjusted rate of 12.0%. Investigators identified 20 risk factors markedly associated with delirium. The strongest predictors included preoperative cognitive impairment, preoperative use of mobility aid, surrogate consent form, ASA class 4 or greater, age 80 years and older, preoperative sepsis, and fall history within 1 year. Patients with delirium generally were older than patients without delirium were and accounted for a greater proportion of emergency cases. Postoperative hospital length of stay was about 4 days longer on average for patients with delirium, compared with those without delirium.
By specialty, the highest rates of postoperative delirium occurred following cardiothoracic (13.7%), orthopedic (13.0%), and general surgeries (13.0%). Study authors found varied associated risk for postoperative delirium within each surgical specialty. For example, in general surgery, the risk for postoperative delirium with partial mastectomy was low, compared with a mid-level risk in the repair of a recurrent, incarcerated, or strangulated inguinal hernia and a high-level risk in Whipple operations.
The model developed to measure delirium management success in 30 hospitals found that adjusted delirium rates ranged from 3.2% to 27.5%, with eight poor- and five excellent-performing outliers. Authors noted that their model demonstrated good calibration and discrimination. Examination of changes in the Bayesian Information Criteria indicates that as few as 10-12 variables may suffice in building a parsimonious model with “an excellent fit.”
Study authors noted that screening for postoperative delirium in older adults is likely in the best interests of patients. However, they also mentioned that such screening may identify cases of postoperative delirium that were previously unrecognized, resulting in higher rates. In addition, the inclusion of only ACS NSQIP hospitals and the voluntary participation may mean a biased dataset. No one delirium prevention intervention was implemented across the hospitals and so the study doesn’t indicate why some hospitals are more successful than are others. Chart-based identification of patients who have delirium needs further study to assess validity.
Authors concluded that one solution may be to “standardize and consistently employ delirium screening in high-risk patients across hospitals, as has been advocated by a coalition of interdisciplinary experts in geriatric care.”
This project is funded in part by a grant from the John A. Hartford Foundation. The authors declare no conflict of interests.
SOURCE: Berlan JR et al. Ann Surg. 2017 July 24. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000002436
A study suggests that
outcome measures, and assessment of hospital performance.Lead author Julia R. Berian, MD, of the University of Chicago Medical Center and her colleagues wrote, “Postoperative delirium has been associated with mortality, morbidity, prolonged length of stay, and increased costs of care. Furthermore, postoperative delirium may be associated with long-term cognitive and functional decline. However, postoperative delirium has not been incorporated as an outcome measure into major surgical quality registries. Approximately one-third of hospitalized delirium is believed to be preventable, making postoperative delirium an ideal target for surgical quality improvement efforts,” Dr. Berian and her colleagues reported in the Annals of Surgery.
The investigators analyzed medical records from elderly patients at 30 hospitals using data from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) Geriatric Surgery Pilot Project for whom postoperative delirium status was ascertained as a binary outcome. The Geriatric Surgery Pilot Project collects and studies novel, geriatric-specific variables on patients aged 65 years and older to include in the NSQIP. The team’s study sample included 20,212 patients aged 65 years and older undergoing surgeries from Jan. 1, 2014, through Dec. 31, 2015. Investigators used hierarchical logistic regression models adjusted for case mix and patient risk factors to measure for hospital performance on managing postoperative delirium in elderly patients. Model performance was then assessed with Hosmer-Lemeshow test and C-statistics, and compared across surgical specialties.
The Geriatric Surgery Pilot data abstractors were instructed to assign postoperative delirium if the medical record words indicating an acute confusional stat such a mental status change, confusion, disorientation, agitation, delirium, and inappropriate behavior. Data were collected from the period 2 hours after surgery to exclude effects of the pharmacologic agents of anesthesia. Delirium status was ascertained as a binary outcome (Yes/No).
Postoperative delirium was observed in 2,427 patients for an average, unadjusted rate of 12.0%. Investigators identified 20 risk factors markedly associated with delirium. The strongest predictors included preoperative cognitive impairment, preoperative use of mobility aid, surrogate consent form, ASA class 4 or greater, age 80 years and older, preoperative sepsis, and fall history within 1 year. Patients with delirium generally were older than patients without delirium were and accounted for a greater proportion of emergency cases. Postoperative hospital length of stay was about 4 days longer on average for patients with delirium, compared with those without delirium.
By specialty, the highest rates of postoperative delirium occurred following cardiothoracic (13.7%), orthopedic (13.0%), and general surgeries (13.0%). Study authors found varied associated risk for postoperative delirium within each surgical specialty. For example, in general surgery, the risk for postoperative delirium with partial mastectomy was low, compared with a mid-level risk in the repair of a recurrent, incarcerated, or strangulated inguinal hernia and a high-level risk in Whipple operations.
The model developed to measure delirium management success in 30 hospitals found that adjusted delirium rates ranged from 3.2% to 27.5%, with eight poor- and five excellent-performing outliers. Authors noted that their model demonstrated good calibration and discrimination. Examination of changes in the Bayesian Information Criteria indicates that as few as 10-12 variables may suffice in building a parsimonious model with “an excellent fit.”
Study authors noted that screening for postoperative delirium in older adults is likely in the best interests of patients. However, they also mentioned that such screening may identify cases of postoperative delirium that were previously unrecognized, resulting in higher rates. In addition, the inclusion of only ACS NSQIP hospitals and the voluntary participation may mean a biased dataset. No one delirium prevention intervention was implemented across the hospitals and so the study doesn’t indicate why some hospitals are more successful than are others. Chart-based identification of patients who have delirium needs further study to assess validity.
Authors concluded that one solution may be to “standardize and consistently employ delirium screening in high-risk patients across hospitals, as has been advocated by a coalition of interdisciplinary experts in geriatric care.”
This project is funded in part by a grant from the John A. Hartford Foundation. The authors declare no conflict of interests.
SOURCE: Berlan JR et al. Ann Surg. 2017 July 24. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000002436
FROM ANNALS OF SURGERY
Key clinical point: Through predictive modeling, the study identified 20 risk factors markedly associated with delirium that can be used to identify high-risk patients.
Major finding: Among the 2,427 patients who experienced delirium, 35% had preoperative cognitive impairment, 30 % had a surrogate sign the consent form, and 32% experienced serious postoperative complications or death.
Study details: An analysis of 2,427 elderly patients at 30 hospitals through data from the ACS NSQIP Geriatric Surgery Pilot Project.
Disclosures: This project is funded in part by a grant from the John A. Hartford Foundation. The authors declare no conflict of interests.
Source: Berian JR et al. Ann Surg. 2017Jul 24. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000002436
ESBL-B before colorectal surgery ups risk of surgical site infection
MADRID – Patients who are carriers of , despite a standard prophylactic antibiotic regimen.
Surgical site infections (SSIs) occurred in 23% of those who tested positive for the pathogens preoperatively, compared with 10.5% of ESBL-B–negative patients – a significant increased risk of 2.25, Yehuda Carmeli, MD, said at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases annual congress.
ESBL-B was not the infective pathogen in most infection cases, but being a carrier increased the likelihood of an ESBL-B SSI. ESBL-B was the pathogen in 7.2% of the carriers and 1.6% of the noncarriers. However, investigators are still working to determine if the species present in the wound infection are the same as the ones present at baseline, said Dr. Carmeli of Tel Aviv Medical Center.
All of these results are emerging from the WP4 study, which was carried out in three hospitals in Serbia, Switzerland, and Israel. Designed as a before-and-after trial, it tested the theory that identifying ESBL carriers and targeting presurgical antibiotic prophylaxis could improve their surgical outcomes.
WP4 was one of five studies in the multinational R-GNOSIS project. “Resistance in Gram-Negative Organisms: Studying Intervention Strategies” is a 12-million-euro, 5-year European collaborative research project designed to identify effective interventions for reducing the carriage, infection, and spread of multi-drug resistant Gram-negative bacteria. From 2012 to 2017, WP4 enrolled almost 4,000 adults scheduled to undergo colorectal surgery (excluding appendectomy or minor anorectal procedures).
Several of the studies were reported at ECCMID 2018.
This portion of R-GNOSIS was intended to investigate the relationship between ESBL-B carriage and postoperative surgical site infections among colorectal surgery patients.
The study comprised 3,626 patients who were preoperatively screened for ESBL-B within 2 weeks of colorectal surgery. The ESBL-B carriage rate was 15.3% overall, but ranged from 12% to 20% by site. Of the carriers, 222 were included in this study sample. They were randomly matched with 444 noncarriers.
Anywhere from 2 weeks to 2 days before surgery, all of the patients received a standard prophylactic antibiotic. This was most often an infusion of 1.5 g cefuroxime plus 500 mg metronidazole. Other cephalosporins were allowed at the clinician’s discretion.
Patients were a mean of 62 years old. Nearly half (48%) had cardiovascular disease and about a third had undergone a prior colorectal surgical procedure. Cancer was the surgical indication in about 70%. Other indications were inflammatory bowel disease and diverticular disease.
The study’s primary outcome was surgical site infection, which was assessed regularly during the hospital stay, at discharge, and by clinic visit or telephone call 30 days after discharge. The secondary outcomes were deep space surgical site infections and infections caused specifically by ESBL-B. ESBL-B was significantly associated with both surgical site infection (OR 2.25) and deep space infection (OR 2.25).
A multivariate analysis controlled for age, cardiovascular disease, indication for surgery, and whether the procedure included a rectal resection, retention of drain at the surgical site, or stoma. The model also controlled for National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance score, a three-point scale that estimates surgical infection risk. Among this cohort, 48% were at low risk, 43% at moderate risk, and 10% at high risk.
Dr. Carmeli made no financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Carmeli et al, ECCMID 2018, Oral Abstract O1133.
MADRID – Patients who are carriers of , despite a standard prophylactic antibiotic regimen.
Surgical site infections (SSIs) occurred in 23% of those who tested positive for the pathogens preoperatively, compared with 10.5% of ESBL-B–negative patients – a significant increased risk of 2.25, Yehuda Carmeli, MD, said at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases annual congress.
ESBL-B was not the infective pathogen in most infection cases, but being a carrier increased the likelihood of an ESBL-B SSI. ESBL-B was the pathogen in 7.2% of the carriers and 1.6% of the noncarriers. However, investigators are still working to determine if the species present in the wound infection are the same as the ones present at baseline, said Dr. Carmeli of Tel Aviv Medical Center.
All of these results are emerging from the WP4 study, which was carried out in three hospitals in Serbia, Switzerland, and Israel. Designed as a before-and-after trial, it tested the theory that identifying ESBL carriers and targeting presurgical antibiotic prophylaxis could improve their surgical outcomes.
WP4 was one of five studies in the multinational R-GNOSIS project. “Resistance in Gram-Negative Organisms: Studying Intervention Strategies” is a 12-million-euro, 5-year European collaborative research project designed to identify effective interventions for reducing the carriage, infection, and spread of multi-drug resistant Gram-negative bacteria. From 2012 to 2017, WP4 enrolled almost 4,000 adults scheduled to undergo colorectal surgery (excluding appendectomy or minor anorectal procedures).
Several of the studies were reported at ECCMID 2018.
This portion of R-GNOSIS was intended to investigate the relationship between ESBL-B carriage and postoperative surgical site infections among colorectal surgery patients.
The study comprised 3,626 patients who were preoperatively screened for ESBL-B within 2 weeks of colorectal surgery. The ESBL-B carriage rate was 15.3% overall, but ranged from 12% to 20% by site. Of the carriers, 222 were included in this study sample. They were randomly matched with 444 noncarriers.
Anywhere from 2 weeks to 2 days before surgery, all of the patients received a standard prophylactic antibiotic. This was most often an infusion of 1.5 g cefuroxime plus 500 mg metronidazole. Other cephalosporins were allowed at the clinician’s discretion.
Patients were a mean of 62 years old. Nearly half (48%) had cardiovascular disease and about a third had undergone a prior colorectal surgical procedure. Cancer was the surgical indication in about 70%. Other indications were inflammatory bowel disease and diverticular disease.
The study’s primary outcome was surgical site infection, which was assessed regularly during the hospital stay, at discharge, and by clinic visit or telephone call 30 days after discharge. The secondary outcomes were deep space surgical site infections and infections caused specifically by ESBL-B. ESBL-B was significantly associated with both surgical site infection (OR 2.25) and deep space infection (OR 2.25).
A multivariate analysis controlled for age, cardiovascular disease, indication for surgery, and whether the procedure included a rectal resection, retention of drain at the surgical site, or stoma. The model also controlled for National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance score, a three-point scale that estimates surgical infection risk. Among this cohort, 48% were at low risk, 43% at moderate risk, and 10% at high risk.
Dr. Carmeli made no financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Carmeli et al, ECCMID 2018, Oral Abstract O1133.
MADRID – Patients who are carriers of , despite a standard prophylactic antibiotic regimen.
Surgical site infections (SSIs) occurred in 23% of those who tested positive for the pathogens preoperatively, compared with 10.5% of ESBL-B–negative patients – a significant increased risk of 2.25, Yehuda Carmeli, MD, said at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases annual congress.
ESBL-B was not the infective pathogen in most infection cases, but being a carrier increased the likelihood of an ESBL-B SSI. ESBL-B was the pathogen in 7.2% of the carriers and 1.6% of the noncarriers. However, investigators are still working to determine if the species present in the wound infection are the same as the ones present at baseline, said Dr. Carmeli of Tel Aviv Medical Center.
All of these results are emerging from the WP4 study, which was carried out in three hospitals in Serbia, Switzerland, and Israel. Designed as a before-and-after trial, it tested the theory that identifying ESBL carriers and targeting presurgical antibiotic prophylaxis could improve their surgical outcomes.
WP4 was one of five studies in the multinational R-GNOSIS project. “Resistance in Gram-Negative Organisms: Studying Intervention Strategies” is a 12-million-euro, 5-year European collaborative research project designed to identify effective interventions for reducing the carriage, infection, and spread of multi-drug resistant Gram-negative bacteria. From 2012 to 2017, WP4 enrolled almost 4,000 adults scheduled to undergo colorectal surgery (excluding appendectomy or minor anorectal procedures).
Several of the studies were reported at ECCMID 2018.
This portion of R-GNOSIS was intended to investigate the relationship between ESBL-B carriage and postoperative surgical site infections among colorectal surgery patients.
The study comprised 3,626 patients who were preoperatively screened for ESBL-B within 2 weeks of colorectal surgery. The ESBL-B carriage rate was 15.3% overall, but ranged from 12% to 20% by site. Of the carriers, 222 were included in this study sample. They were randomly matched with 444 noncarriers.
Anywhere from 2 weeks to 2 days before surgery, all of the patients received a standard prophylactic antibiotic. This was most often an infusion of 1.5 g cefuroxime plus 500 mg metronidazole. Other cephalosporins were allowed at the clinician’s discretion.
Patients were a mean of 62 years old. Nearly half (48%) had cardiovascular disease and about a third had undergone a prior colorectal surgical procedure. Cancer was the surgical indication in about 70%. Other indications were inflammatory bowel disease and diverticular disease.
The study’s primary outcome was surgical site infection, which was assessed regularly during the hospital stay, at discharge, and by clinic visit or telephone call 30 days after discharge. The secondary outcomes were deep space surgical site infections and infections caused specifically by ESBL-B. ESBL-B was significantly associated with both surgical site infection (OR 2.25) and deep space infection (OR 2.25).
A multivariate analysis controlled for age, cardiovascular disease, indication for surgery, and whether the procedure included a rectal resection, retention of drain at the surgical site, or stoma. The model also controlled for National Nosocomial Infection Surveillance score, a three-point scale that estimates surgical infection risk. Among this cohort, 48% were at low risk, 43% at moderate risk, and 10% at high risk.
Dr. Carmeli made no financial disclosures.
SOURCE: Carmeli et al, ECCMID 2018, Oral Abstract O1133.
REPORTING FROM ECCMID 2018
Key clinical point: ESBL-B colonization increased the risk of surgical site infections after colorectal surgery, despite use of standard preoperative antibiotics.
Major finding: ESBL-B carriage more than doubled the risk of a colorectal surgical site infection by (OR 2.25).
Study details: The prospective study comprised 222 carriers and 444 noncarriers.
Disclosures: The study is part of the R-GNOSIS project, a 12-million-euro, 5-year European collaborative research project designed to identify effective interventions for reducing the carriage, infection, and spread of multi-drug resistant Gram-negative bacteria.
Source: Carmeli Y et al. ECCMID 2018, Oral Abstract O1130.
Challenging dogma: Postop fever
The dogma
During our medical school and residency years, many of us learned the “Rule of W” as a helpful mnemonic for causes of postoperative fever: Wind (pulmonary causes, including atelectasis), Water (urinary tract infection), Wound (infection), Walking (deep venous thrombosis), and Wonder Drugs (drug fever). Classic teaching has been that noninfectious causes predominate during the first 48 hours post op, with infectious diseases taking over after that. Atelectasis is also very common in the immediate postoperative period, seen in up to 90% of patients by postoperative day 3, and is often taught as the primary cause of fever in the immediate postoperative period.1,2 But is this backed up by the evidence?
The evidence
A 2011 systematic review looked at the association between atelectasis and fever. Eight studies involving 998 postoperative patients were included, with the majority of cases being postcardiac or abdominal surgeries. Seven of the eight studies failed to show a significant association between early postoperative fever (EPF) and atelectasis; in the one “positive” study, atelectasis was assessed only once on postop day 4. The authors of the review concluded that “there is no clinical evidence suggesting that atelectasis is a major cause of early EPF”.3 A subsequent study of postoperative fever in pediatric patients showed similar negative results.4 This begs the question – does atelectasis cause fever at all? Likely not. In an animal study from 1963, experimentally induced atelectasis resulted in fever, but the fever appeared secondary to infectious causes (i.e. pneumonia in the affected lung) and resolved with antibiotic administration.5 It seems more likely that EPF is due to other factors, such as the increase in pyrogenic cytokines seen in the postoperative period.3
So, what should the new generation of medical students and residents be taught? In an article reviewing complications seen in a cohort of over 600,000 surgical patients, the authors proposed a new “Rule of W” to reflect the most frequent postoperative complications, in order of timing: Waves (myocardial infarction), Wind (pneumonia), Water (urinary tract), Wound (infection), and Walking (deep venous thrombosis).6
Takeaway
Atelectasis and early postoperative fever are both commonly seen after surgery, but the relationship appears to be simply an association, not causal. The “Rule of W” can be an effective mnemonic for the causes of postop fever – just make sure you use the updated version.
Dr. Sehgal is clinical associate professor of medicine, division of hospital medicine, South Texas Veterans Health Care System and University of Texas Health Sciences Center at San Antonio. He is a member of the editorial advisory board for The Hospitalist.
References
1. Carter AR, et al. Thoracic Alterations After Cardiac Surgery. AJR. 1983;140(3):475-81.
2. Chu DI, Agarwal S. Postoperative Complications. In: Doherty GM. eds. CURRENT Diagnosis & Treatment: Surgery, 14e New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 2014.
3. Mavros MN, Velmahos GC, Falagas ME. Atelectasis as a Cause of Postoperative Fever. Chest. 2011;140(2):418-24. doi: 10.1378/chest.11-0127.
4. Kane JM, Friedman M, Mitchell JB, Wang D, Huang Z, Backer CL. Association Between Postoperative Fever and Atelectasis in Pediatric Patients. World J Pediatr Congenit Heart Surg. 2011;2(3):359-63. doi: 10.1177/2150135111403778.
5. Lansing AM, Jamieson WG. Mechanisms of fever in pulmonary atelectasis. Arch Surg. 1963;87:168-74.
6. Hyder JA, Wakeam E, Arora V, Hevelone ND, Lipsitz SR, Nguyen LL. Investigating the “Rule of W,” a Mnemonic for Teaching on Postoperative Complications. J Surg Educ. 2015;72(3):430-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2014.11.004.
The dogma
During our medical school and residency years, many of us learned the “Rule of W” as a helpful mnemonic for causes of postoperative fever: Wind (pulmonary causes, including atelectasis), Water (urinary tract infection), Wound (infection), Walking (deep venous thrombosis), and Wonder Drugs (drug fever). Classic teaching has been that noninfectious causes predominate during the first 48 hours post op, with infectious diseases taking over after that. Atelectasis is also very common in the immediate postoperative period, seen in up to 90% of patients by postoperative day 3, and is often taught as the primary cause of fever in the immediate postoperative period.1,2 But is this backed up by the evidence?
The evidence
A 2011 systematic review looked at the association between atelectasis and fever. Eight studies involving 998 postoperative patients were included, with the majority of cases being postcardiac or abdominal surgeries. Seven of the eight studies failed to show a significant association between early postoperative fever (EPF) and atelectasis; in the one “positive” study, atelectasis was assessed only once on postop day 4. The authors of the review concluded that “there is no clinical evidence suggesting that atelectasis is a major cause of early EPF”.3 A subsequent study of postoperative fever in pediatric patients showed similar negative results.4 This begs the question – does atelectasis cause fever at all? Likely not. In an animal study from 1963, experimentally induced atelectasis resulted in fever, but the fever appeared secondary to infectious causes (i.e. pneumonia in the affected lung) and resolved with antibiotic administration.5 It seems more likely that EPF is due to other factors, such as the increase in pyrogenic cytokines seen in the postoperative period.3
So, what should the new generation of medical students and residents be taught? In an article reviewing complications seen in a cohort of over 600,000 surgical patients, the authors proposed a new “Rule of W” to reflect the most frequent postoperative complications, in order of timing: Waves (myocardial infarction), Wind (pneumonia), Water (urinary tract), Wound (infection), and Walking (deep venous thrombosis).6
Takeaway
Atelectasis and early postoperative fever are both commonly seen after surgery, but the relationship appears to be simply an association, not causal. The “Rule of W” can be an effective mnemonic for the causes of postop fever – just make sure you use the updated version.
Dr. Sehgal is clinical associate professor of medicine, division of hospital medicine, South Texas Veterans Health Care System and University of Texas Health Sciences Center at San Antonio. He is a member of the editorial advisory board for The Hospitalist.
References
1. Carter AR, et al. Thoracic Alterations After Cardiac Surgery. AJR. 1983;140(3):475-81.
2. Chu DI, Agarwal S. Postoperative Complications. In: Doherty GM. eds. CURRENT Diagnosis & Treatment: Surgery, 14e New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 2014.
3. Mavros MN, Velmahos GC, Falagas ME. Atelectasis as a Cause of Postoperative Fever. Chest. 2011;140(2):418-24. doi: 10.1378/chest.11-0127.
4. Kane JM, Friedman M, Mitchell JB, Wang D, Huang Z, Backer CL. Association Between Postoperative Fever and Atelectasis in Pediatric Patients. World J Pediatr Congenit Heart Surg. 2011;2(3):359-63. doi: 10.1177/2150135111403778.
5. Lansing AM, Jamieson WG. Mechanisms of fever in pulmonary atelectasis. Arch Surg. 1963;87:168-74.
6. Hyder JA, Wakeam E, Arora V, Hevelone ND, Lipsitz SR, Nguyen LL. Investigating the “Rule of W,” a Mnemonic for Teaching on Postoperative Complications. J Surg Educ. 2015;72(3):430-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2014.11.004.
The dogma
During our medical school and residency years, many of us learned the “Rule of W” as a helpful mnemonic for causes of postoperative fever: Wind (pulmonary causes, including atelectasis), Water (urinary tract infection), Wound (infection), Walking (deep venous thrombosis), and Wonder Drugs (drug fever). Classic teaching has been that noninfectious causes predominate during the first 48 hours post op, with infectious diseases taking over after that. Atelectasis is also very common in the immediate postoperative period, seen in up to 90% of patients by postoperative day 3, and is often taught as the primary cause of fever in the immediate postoperative period.1,2 But is this backed up by the evidence?
The evidence
A 2011 systematic review looked at the association between atelectasis and fever. Eight studies involving 998 postoperative patients were included, with the majority of cases being postcardiac or abdominal surgeries. Seven of the eight studies failed to show a significant association between early postoperative fever (EPF) and atelectasis; in the one “positive” study, atelectasis was assessed only once on postop day 4. The authors of the review concluded that “there is no clinical evidence suggesting that atelectasis is a major cause of early EPF”.3 A subsequent study of postoperative fever in pediatric patients showed similar negative results.4 This begs the question – does atelectasis cause fever at all? Likely not. In an animal study from 1963, experimentally induced atelectasis resulted in fever, but the fever appeared secondary to infectious causes (i.e. pneumonia in the affected lung) and resolved with antibiotic administration.5 It seems more likely that EPF is due to other factors, such as the increase in pyrogenic cytokines seen in the postoperative period.3
So, what should the new generation of medical students and residents be taught? In an article reviewing complications seen in a cohort of over 600,000 surgical patients, the authors proposed a new “Rule of W” to reflect the most frequent postoperative complications, in order of timing: Waves (myocardial infarction), Wind (pneumonia), Water (urinary tract), Wound (infection), and Walking (deep venous thrombosis).6
Takeaway
Atelectasis and early postoperative fever are both commonly seen after surgery, but the relationship appears to be simply an association, not causal. The “Rule of W” can be an effective mnemonic for the causes of postop fever – just make sure you use the updated version.
Dr. Sehgal is clinical associate professor of medicine, division of hospital medicine, South Texas Veterans Health Care System and University of Texas Health Sciences Center at San Antonio. He is a member of the editorial advisory board for The Hospitalist.
References
1. Carter AR, et al. Thoracic Alterations After Cardiac Surgery. AJR. 1983;140(3):475-81.
2. Chu DI, Agarwal S. Postoperative Complications. In: Doherty GM. eds. CURRENT Diagnosis & Treatment: Surgery, 14e New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 2014.
3. Mavros MN, Velmahos GC, Falagas ME. Atelectasis as a Cause of Postoperative Fever. Chest. 2011;140(2):418-24. doi: 10.1378/chest.11-0127.
4. Kane JM, Friedman M, Mitchell JB, Wang D, Huang Z, Backer CL. Association Between Postoperative Fever and Atelectasis in Pediatric Patients. World J Pediatr Congenit Heart Surg. 2011;2(3):359-63. doi: 10.1177/2150135111403778.
5. Lansing AM, Jamieson WG. Mechanisms of fever in pulmonary atelectasis. Arch Surg. 1963;87:168-74.
6. Hyder JA, Wakeam E, Arora V, Hevelone ND, Lipsitz SR, Nguyen LL. Investigating the “Rule of W,” a Mnemonic for Teaching on Postoperative Complications. J Surg Educ. 2015;72(3):430-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jsurg.2014.11.004.
Multidisciplinary care improves surgical outcomes for elderly patients
and were able to leave the hospital after a shorter stay, according to findings from a case-control study of nearly 400 patients.
Data from previous studies suggest that preoperative assessment by geriatric experts can improve outcomes for the elderly, who are more likely than are younger patients to develop preventable postoperative complications, and “this evidence supports the formulation of a different approach to preoperative assessment and postoperative care for this population,” wrote Shelley R. McDonald, DO, of Duke University, Durham, N.C., and colleagues.
The intervention, known as the Perioperative Optimization of Senior Health (POSH), was described as “a quality improvement initiative with prospective data collection.” Patients in a geriatrics clinic within an academic center were selected for the study if they were at high risk for complications linked to elective abdominal surgery. High risk was defined as older than 85 years of age, or older than 65 years of age with conditions including cognitive impairment, recent weight loss, multiple comorbidities, and polypharmacy (JAMA Surg. 2018 Jan 3. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.5513).
The POSH intervention patients received preoperative evaluation from a team including a geriatrician, geriatric resource nurse, social worker, program administrator, and nurse practitioner from the preoperative anesthesia testing clinic. Patients and families were advised on risk management and care optimization involving cognition, comorbidities, medications, mobility, functional status, nutrition, hydration, pain, and advanced care planning.
Patients in the POSH group were on average older, had more comorbidities, and were more likely to be smokers. But despite these disadvantaging characteristics, they still had better outcomes in several important variables than did those in the control group.
The POSH group had significantly shorter hospital stays, compared with controls (4 days vs. 6 days), and significantly lower all-cause readmission rates at both 7 days (2.8% vs. 9.9%) and 30 days (7.8% vs. 18.3%). The significance persisted whether the surgeries were laparoscopic or open.
The overall complication rate was lower in the POSH group, compared with the controls, but fell short of statistical significance (44.8% vs. 58.7%, P = .01). However, rates of specific complications were significantly lower in the POSH group, compared with controls, including postoperative cardiogenic or hypovolemic shock (2.2% vs. 8.4%), bleeding, either during or after surgery (6.1% vs. 15.4%), and postoperative ileus (4.9% vs. 20.3%).
“Delirium was identified in POSH patients at higher rates than in the control group, which is not unexpected because higher postoperative delirium rates are known to be identified with increased screening,” the researchers noted. “Collaborative care allows for increasing the recognition of geriatric syndromes like delirium, more focus on symptom management, and proactively anticipating complications,” they said.
The study results were limited by several factors including a long enrollment period for the POSH patients, and potential changes in surgical protocols, the researchers said. However, the findings support the need for further research and more refined analysis to identify the most beneficial aspects of care, and to support better clinical decision making about the timing of interventions and the type of patient who could benefit, they noted.
The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. The John A. Hartford Foundation Center of Excellence National Program Award provided salary and database support.
SOURCE: McDonald S et al. JAMA Surg. 2018 Jan 3. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.5513.
and were able to leave the hospital after a shorter stay, according to findings from a case-control study of nearly 400 patients.
Data from previous studies suggest that preoperative assessment by geriatric experts can improve outcomes for the elderly, who are more likely than are younger patients to develop preventable postoperative complications, and “this evidence supports the formulation of a different approach to preoperative assessment and postoperative care for this population,” wrote Shelley R. McDonald, DO, of Duke University, Durham, N.C., and colleagues.
The intervention, known as the Perioperative Optimization of Senior Health (POSH), was described as “a quality improvement initiative with prospective data collection.” Patients in a geriatrics clinic within an academic center were selected for the study if they were at high risk for complications linked to elective abdominal surgery. High risk was defined as older than 85 years of age, or older than 65 years of age with conditions including cognitive impairment, recent weight loss, multiple comorbidities, and polypharmacy (JAMA Surg. 2018 Jan 3. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.5513).
The POSH intervention patients received preoperative evaluation from a team including a geriatrician, geriatric resource nurse, social worker, program administrator, and nurse practitioner from the preoperative anesthesia testing clinic. Patients and families were advised on risk management and care optimization involving cognition, comorbidities, medications, mobility, functional status, nutrition, hydration, pain, and advanced care planning.
Patients in the POSH group were on average older, had more comorbidities, and were more likely to be smokers. But despite these disadvantaging characteristics, they still had better outcomes in several important variables than did those in the control group.
The POSH group had significantly shorter hospital stays, compared with controls (4 days vs. 6 days), and significantly lower all-cause readmission rates at both 7 days (2.8% vs. 9.9%) and 30 days (7.8% vs. 18.3%). The significance persisted whether the surgeries were laparoscopic or open.
The overall complication rate was lower in the POSH group, compared with the controls, but fell short of statistical significance (44.8% vs. 58.7%, P = .01). However, rates of specific complications were significantly lower in the POSH group, compared with controls, including postoperative cardiogenic or hypovolemic shock (2.2% vs. 8.4%), bleeding, either during or after surgery (6.1% vs. 15.4%), and postoperative ileus (4.9% vs. 20.3%).
“Delirium was identified in POSH patients at higher rates than in the control group, which is not unexpected because higher postoperative delirium rates are known to be identified with increased screening,” the researchers noted. “Collaborative care allows for increasing the recognition of geriatric syndromes like delirium, more focus on symptom management, and proactively anticipating complications,” they said.
The study results were limited by several factors including a long enrollment period for the POSH patients, and potential changes in surgical protocols, the researchers said. However, the findings support the need for further research and more refined analysis to identify the most beneficial aspects of care, and to support better clinical decision making about the timing of interventions and the type of patient who could benefit, they noted.
The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. The John A. Hartford Foundation Center of Excellence National Program Award provided salary and database support.
SOURCE: McDonald S et al. JAMA Surg. 2018 Jan 3. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.5513.
and were able to leave the hospital after a shorter stay, according to findings from a case-control study of nearly 400 patients.
Data from previous studies suggest that preoperative assessment by geriatric experts can improve outcomes for the elderly, who are more likely than are younger patients to develop preventable postoperative complications, and “this evidence supports the formulation of a different approach to preoperative assessment and postoperative care for this population,” wrote Shelley R. McDonald, DO, of Duke University, Durham, N.C., and colleagues.
The intervention, known as the Perioperative Optimization of Senior Health (POSH), was described as “a quality improvement initiative with prospective data collection.” Patients in a geriatrics clinic within an academic center were selected for the study if they were at high risk for complications linked to elective abdominal surgery. High risk was defined as older than 85 years of age, or older than 65 years of age with conditions including cognitive impairment, recent weight loss, multiple comorbidities, and polypharmacy (JAMA Surg. 2018 Jan 3. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.5513).
The POSH intervention patients received preoperative evaluation from a team including a geriatrician, geriatric resource nurse, social worker, program administrator, and nurse practitioner from the preoperative anesthesia testing clinic. Patients and families were advised on risk management and care optimization involving cognition, comorbidities, medications, mobility, functional status, nutrition, hydration, pain, and advanced care planning.
Patients in the POSH group were on average older, had more comorbidities, and were more likely to be smokers. But despite these disadvantaging characteristics, they still had better outcomes in several important variables than did those in the control group.
The POSH group had significantly shorter hospital stays, compared with controls (4 days vs. 6 days), and significantly lower all-cause readmission rates at both 7 days (2.8% vs. 9.9%) and 30 days (7.8% vs. 18.3%). The significance persisted whether the surgeries were laparoscopic or open.
The overall complication rate was lower in the POSH group, compared with the controls, but fell short of statistical significance (44.8% vs. 58.7%, P = .01). However, rates of specific complications were significantly lower in the POSH group, compared with controls, including postoperative cardiogenic or hypovolemic shock (2.2% vs. 8.4%), bleeding, either during or after surgery (6.1% vs. 15.4%), and postoperative ileus (4.9% vs. 20.3%).
“Delirium was identified in POSH patients at higher rates than in the control group, which is not unexpected because higher postoperative delirium rates are known to be identified with increased screening,” the researchers noted. “Collaborative care allows for increasing the recognition of geriatric syndromes like delirium, more focus on symptom management, and proactively anticipating complications,” they said.
The study results were limited by several factors including a long enrollment period for the POSH patients, and potential changes in surgical protocols, the researchers said. However, the findings support the need for further research and more refined analysis to identify the most beneficial aspects of care, and to support better clinical decision making about the timing of interventions and the type of patient who could benefit, they noted.
The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. The John A. Hartford Foundation Center of Excellence National Program Award provided salary and database support.
SOURCE: McDonald S et al. JAMA Surg. 2018 Jan 3. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.5513.
FROM JAMA SURGERY
Key clinical point: A preoperative surgical intervention improved outcomes and shortened hospital stays for seniors.
Major finding: The POSH group had significantly shorter hospital stays compared with controls (4 days vs. 6 days).
Study details: The data come from a study of 183 surgery patients and 143 controls.
Disclosures: The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.
Source: McDonald S JAMA Surg. 2018 Jan 3. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.5513
Brief preoperative score predicts postoperative complications in the elderly
Background: Elective operations have become increasingly more common in the elderly. This population is at a higher risk for postsurgical complications. Previous research into preoperative risk assessment relied on geriatricians, of whom there is a national shortage.
Study design: Prospective cohort study.
Setting: Preoperative surgery clinics at the University of Michigan Health System.
Synopsis: A total of 736 elderly patients had a preoperative Vulnerable Elders Surgical Pathways and Outcomes Assessment (VESPA) administered by a surgical physician assistant in clinic. VESPA assessed activities of daily living, history of falling or gait impairment, and depressive symptoms. Patients underwent a Mini-Cog examination and a Timed Up and Go assessment. Patients were asked whether they expected they could manage themselves alone after discharge. One in seven patients reported difficulty with one or more of the activities of daily living and one in three stated they would be unable to manage postoperative self-care alone. Overall, 25.3% of patients had geriatric or surgical complications. The VESPA score predicted postoperative complications (area under the curve, 0.76). More specifically, preexisting difficulties with activities of daily living, anticipated self-care difficulty, a Charlson Comorbidity score of 2 or greater, male sex, or higher surgical relative value units were all independently associated with postoperative complications.
Bottom line: Elderly patients at an increased risk of postoperative complications can be identified by nonphysician staff using the VESPA preoperative assessment.
Citation: Min L et al. Estimating risk of postsurgical general and geriatric complications using the VESPA preoperative tool. JAMA Surg. 2017 Aug 2. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.2635.
Dr. Hoegh is a hospitalist at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.
Background: Elective operations have become increasingly more common in the elderly. This population is at a higher risk for postsurgical complications. Previous research into preoperative risk assessment relied on geriatricians, of whom there is a national shortage.
Study design: Prospective cohort study.
Setting: Preoperative surgery clinics at the University of Michigan Health System.
Synopsis: A total of 736 elderly patients had a preoperative Vulnerable Elders Surgical Pathways and Outcomes Assessment (VESPA) administered by a surgical physician assistant in clinic. VESPA assessed activities of daily living, history of falling or gait impairment, and depressive symptoms. Patients underwent a Mini-Cog examination and a Timed Up and Go assessment. Patients were asked whether they expected they could manage themselves alone after discharge. One in seven patients reported difficulty with one or more of the activities of daily living and one in three stated they would be unable to manage postoperative self-care alone. Overall, 25.3% of patients had geriatric or surgical complications. The VESPA score predicted postoperative complications (area under the curve, 0.76). More specifically, preexisting difficulties with activities of daily living, anticipated self-care difficulty, a Charlson Comorbidity score of 2 or greater, male sex, or higher surgical relative value units were all independently associated with postoperative complications.
Bottom line: Elderly patients at an increased risk of postoperative complications can be identified by nonphysician staff using the VESPA preoperative assessment.
Citation: Min L et al. Estimating risk of postsurgical general and geriatric complications using the VESPA preoperative tool. JAMA Surg. 2017 Aug 2. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.2635.
Dr. Hoegh is a hospitalist at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.
Background: Elective operations have become increasingly more common in the elderly. This population is at a higher risk for postsurgical complications. Previous research into preoperative risk assessment relied on geriatricians, of whom there is a national shortage.
Study design: Prospective cohort study.
Setting: Preoperative surgery clinics at the University of Michigan Health System.
Synopsis: A total of 736 elderly patients had a preoperative Vulnerable Elders Surgical Pathways and Outcomes Assessment (VESPA) administered by a surgical physician assistant in clinic. VESPA assessed activities of daily living, history of falling or gait impairment, and depressive symptoms. Patients underwent a Mini-Cog examination and a Timed Up and Go assessment. Patients were asked whether they expected they could manage themselves alone after discharge. One in seven patients reported difficulty with one or more of the activities of daily living and one in three stated they would be unable to manage postoperative self-care alone. Overall, 25.3% of patients had geriatric or surgical complications. The VESPA score predicted postoperative complications (area under the curve, 0.76). More specifically, preexisting difficulties with activities of daily living, anticipated self-care difficulty, a Charlson Comorbidity score of 2 or greater, male sex, or higher surgical relative value units were all independently associated with postoperative complications.
Bottom line: Elderly patients at an increased risk of postoperative complications can be identified by nonphysician staff using the VESPA preoperative assessment.
Citation: Min L et al. Estimating risk of postsurgical general and geriatric complications using the VESPA preoperative tool. JAMA Surg. 2017 Aug 2. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2017.2635.
Dr. Hoegh is a hospitalist at the University of Colorado School of Medicine.
Summary of guidelines for DMARDs for elective surgery
Clinical question: What is the best management for disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) for patients with RA, ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, or systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) undergoing elective total knee arthroplasty (TKA) or total hip arthroplasty (THA)?
Background: There are limited data in the evaluation of risks of flare with stopping DMARDs versus the risks of infection with continuing them perioperatively for elective TKA or THA, which are procedures frequently required by this patient population.
Study design: Multistep systematic literature review.
Setting: Collaboration between American College of Rheumatology and American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons.
Synopsis: Through literature review and a requirement of 80% agreement by the panel, seven recommendations were created. Continue methotrexate, leflunomide, hydroxychloroquine, and sulfasalazine. Biologic agents should be held with surgery scheduled at the end of dosing cycle and restarted when the wound is healed, sutures/staples are removed, and there are no signs of infection (~14 days). Tofacitinib should be held for all conditions except SLE for 1 week. For severe SLE, continue mycophenolate mofetil, azathioprine, cyclosporine, or tacrolimus but hold for 1 week for nonsevere SLE. If current dose of glucocorticoids is less than 20 mg/day, the current dose should be administered rather than administering stress-dose steroids.
Limitations include a limited number of studies conducted in the perioperative period, the existing data are based on lower dosages, and it is unknown whether results can be extrapolated to surgical procedures beyond TKA and THA. Additionally there is a need for further studies on glucocorticoid management and biologic agents.
Bottom line: Perioperative management of DMARDs is complex and understudied, but the review provides an evidence-based guide for patients undergoing TKA and THA.
Citation: Goodman SM, Springer B, Gordon G, et. al. 2017 American College of Rheumatology/American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons Guideline for the Perioperative Management of Antirheumatic Medication in Patients With Rheumatic Diseases Undergoing Elective Total Hip or Total Knee Arthroplasty. Arthritis Care Res. 2017 Aug;69(8):1111-24.
Dr. Kochar is hospitalist and assistant professor of medicine, Icahn School of Medicine of the Mount Sinai Health System.
Clinical question: What is the best management for disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) for patients with RA, ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, or systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) undergoing elective total knee arthroplasty (TKA) or total hip arthroplasty (THA)?
Background: There are limited data in the evaluation of risks of flare with stopping DMARDs versus the risks of infection with continuing them perioperatively for elective TKA or THA, which are procedures frequently required by this patient population.
Study design: Multistep systematic literature review.
Setting: Collaboration between American College of Rheumatology and American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons.
Synopsis: Through literature review and a requirement of 80% agreement by the panel, seven recommendations were created. Continue methotrexate, leflunomide, hydroxychloroquine, and sulfasalazine. Biologic agents should be held with surgery scheduled at the end of dosing cycle and restarted when the wound is healed, sutures/staples are removed, and there are no signs of infection (~14 days). Tofacitinib should be held for all conditions except SLE for 1 week. For severe SLE, continue mycophenolate mofetil, azathioprine, cyclosporine, or tacrolimus but hold for 1 week for nonsevere SLE. If current dose of glucocorticoids is less than 20 mg/day, the current dose should be administered rather than administering stress-dose steroids.
Limitations include a limited number of studies conducted in the perioperative period, the existing data are based on lower dosages, and it is unknown whether results can be extrapolated to surgical procedures beyond TKA and THA. Additionally there is a need for further studies on glucocorticoid management and biologic agents.
Bottom line: Perioperative management of DMARDs is complex and understudied, but the review provides an evidence-based guide for patients undergoing TKA and THA.
Citation: Goodman SM, Springer B, Gordon G, et. al. 2017 American College of Rheumatology/American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons Guideline for the Perioperative Management of Antirheumatic Medication in Patients With Rheumatic Diseases Undergoing Elective Total Hip or Total Knee Arthroplasty. Arthritis Care Res. 2017 Aug;69(8):1111-24.
Dr. Kochar is hospitalist and assistant professor of medicine, Icahn School of Medicine of the Mount Sinai Health System.
Clinical question: What is the best management for disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs) for patients with RA, ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, or systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) undergoing elective total knee arthroplasty (TKA) or total hip arthroplasty (THA)?
Background: There are limited data in the evaluation of risks of flare with stopping DMARDs versus the risks of infection with continuing them perioperatively for elective TKA or THA, which are procedures frequently required by this patient population.
Study design: Multistep systematic literature review.
Setting: Collaboration between American College of Rheumatology and American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons.
Synopsis: Through literature review and a requirement of 80% agreement by the panel, seven recommendations were created. Continue methotrexate, leflunomide, hydroxychloroquine, and sulfasalazine. Biologic agents should be held with surgery scheduled at the end of dosing cycle and restarted when the wound is healed, sutures/staples are removed, and there are no signs of infection (~14 days). Tofacitinib should be held for all conditions except SLE for 1 week. For severe SLE, continue mycophenolate mofetil, azathioprine, cyclosporine, or tacrolimus but hold for 1 week for nonsevere SLE. If current dose of glucocorticoids is less than 20 mg/day, the current dose should be administered rather than administering stress-dose steroids.
Limitations include a limited number of studies conducted in the perioperative period, the existing data are based on lower dosages, and it is unknown whether results can be extrapolated to surgical procedures beyond TKA and THA. Additionally there is a need for further studies on glucocorticoid management and biologic agents.
Bottom line: Perioperative management of DMARDs is complex and understudied, but the review provides an evidence-based guide for patients undergoing TKA and THA.
Citation: Goodman SM, Springer B, Gordon G, et. al. 2017 American College of Rheumatology/American Association of Hip and Knee Surgeons Guideline for the Perioperative Management of Antirheumatic Medication in Patients With Rheumatic Diseases Undergoing Elective Total Hip or Total Knee Arthroplasty. Arthritis Care Res. 2017 Aug;69(8):1111-24.
Dr. Kochar is hospitalist and assistant professor of medicine, Icahn School of Medicine of the Mount Sinai Health System.
Antiplatelet therapy can be continued through surgery without increased risk of reintervention for bleeding
Clinical question: Does continuing antiplatelet therapy through noncardiac surgery increase the risk of postoperative blood transfusion or surgical reintervention for bleeding?
Background: Many prior studies have analyzed the risks and benefits of holding versus continuing antiplatelet therapy in the perioperative setting, but heterogeneity in outcome reporting has limited the ability to compare and contrast studies.
Study design: Meta-analysis.
Setting: Both domestic and international studies were included in the meta-analysis.
Synopsis: With a MEDLINE search, 37 studies with over 30,000 patients total were identified and included in the meta-analysis. Studies compared outcomes of transfusion and surgical reintervention for bleeding in patients receiving noncardiac surgery. Patients were either on no antiplatelet therapy, single therapy, or dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT). Relative risk of transfusion escalated in proportion to the amount of antiplatelet therapy; there was a 14% increased risk (95% confidence interval, 1.03-1.26) with aspirin over control and a 33% (95% CI, 1.15-1.55) increased risk with DAPT over control.
Risk of surgical reintervention for bleeding, however, was not increased above control whether on aspirin (relative risk, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.76-1.22), clopidogrel (RR, 1.84; 95% CI, 0.87-3.87), or DAPT (RR, 1.51; (95% CI, 0.92-2.49).
Bottom line: In noncardiac surgery, continuing aspirin or DAPT perioperatively increases the need for transfusion, but not the need for surgical reintervention for bleeding.
Citation: Columbo JA, Lambour AJ, Sundling RA, et. al. A meta-analysis of the impact of aspirin, clopidogrel, and dual-antiplatelet therapy on bleeding complications in noncardiac surgery. Ann Surg. 2017;20(20):1-9.
Dr. Portnoy is hospitalist and instructor of medicine, Icahn School of Medicine of the Mount Sinai Health System.
Clinical question: Does continuing antiplatelet therapy through noncardiac surgery increase the risk of postoperative blood transfusion or surgical reintervention for bleeding?
Background: Many prior studies have analyzed the risks and benefits of holding versus continuing antiplatelet therapy in the perioperative setting, but heterogeneity in outcome reporting has limited the ability to compare and contrast studies.
Study design: Meta-analysis.
Setting: Both domestic and international studies were included in the meta-analysis.
Synopsis: With a MEDLINE search, 37 studies with over 30,000 patients total were identified and included in the meta-analysis. Studies compared outcomes of transfusion and surgical reintervention for bleeding in patients receiving noncardiac surgery. Patients were either on no antiplatelet therapy, single therapy, or dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT). Relative risk of transfusion escalated in proportion to the amount of antiplatelet therapy; there was a 14% increased risk (95% confidence interval, 1.03-1.26) with aspirin over control and a 33% (95% CI, 1.15-1.55) increased risk with DAPT over control.
Risk of surgical reintervention for bleeding, however, was not increased above control whether on aspirin (relative risk, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.76-1.22), clopidogrel (RR, 1.84; 95% CI, 0.87-3.87), or DAPT (RR, 1.51; (95% CI, 0.92-2.49).
Bottom line: In noncardiac surgery, continuing aspirin or DAPT perioperatively increases the need for transfusion, but not the need for surgical reintervention for bleeding.
Citation: Columbo JA, Lambour AJ, Sundling RA, et. al. A meta-analysis of the impact of aspirin, clopidogrel, and dual-antiplatelet therapy on bleeding complications in noncardiac surgery. Ann Surg. 2017;20(20):1-9.
Dr. Portnoy is hospitalist and instructor of medicine, Icahn School of Medicine of the Mount Sinai Health System.
Clinical question: Does continuing antiplatelet therapy through noncardiac surgery increase the risk of postoperative blood transfusion or surgical reintervention for bleeding?
Background: Many prior studies have analyzed the risks and benefits of holding versus continuing antiplatelet therapy in the perioperative setting, but heterogeneity in outcome reporting has limited the ability to compare and contrast studies.
Study design: Meta-analysis.
Setting: Both domestic and international studies were included in the meta-analysis.
Synopsis: With a MEDLINE search, 37 studies with over 30,000 patients total were identified and included in the meta-analysis. Studies compared outcomes of transfusion and surgical reintervention for bleeding in patients receiving noncardiac surgery. Patients were either on no antiplatelet therapy, single therapy, or dual-antiplatelet therapy (DAPT). Relative risk of transfusion escalated in proportion to the amount of antiplatelet therapy; there was a 14% increased risk (95% confidence interval, 1.03-1.26) with aspirin over control and a 33% (95% CI, 1.15-1.55) increased risk with DAPT over control.
Risk of surgical reintervention for bleeding, however, was not increased above control whether on aspirin (relative risk, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.76-1.22), clopidogrel (RR, 1.84; 95% CI, 0.87-3.87), or DAPT (RR, 1.51; (95% CI, 0.92-2.49).
Bottom line: In noncardiac surgery, continuing aspirin or DAPT perioperatively increases the need for transfusion, but not the need for surgical reintervention for bleeding.
Citation: Columbo JA, Lambour AJ, Sundling RA, et. al. A meta-analysis of the impact of aspirin, clopidogrel, and dual-antiplatelet therapy on bleeding complications in noncardiac surgery. Ann Surg. 2017;20(20):1-9.
Dr. Portnoy is hospitalist and instructor of medicine, Icahn School of Medicine of the Mount Sinai Health System.