Association Between Postoperative Complications and Clinical Cancer Outcomes

Introduction The treatment for a majority of solid organ tumors is surgical resection; 10–20 % of patients suffer a perioperative complication. Perioperative complications may contribute to cancer recurrence. This study examined the relationship between postoperative complications and risk-adjusted...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of surgical oncology 2013-12, Vol.20 (13), p.4063-4066
Hauptverfasser: Scaife, Courtney L., Hartz, Arthur, Pappas, Lisa, Pelletier, Peter, He, Tao, Glasgow, Robert E., Mulvihill, Sean J.
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container_end_page 4066
container_issue 13
container_start_page 4063
container_title Annals of surgical oncology
container_volume 20
creator Scaife, Courtney L.
Hartz, Arthur
Pappas, Lisa
Pelletier, Peter
He, Tao
Glasgow, Robert E.
Mulvihill, Sean J.
description Introduction The treatment for a majority of solid organ tumors is surgical resection; 10–20 % of patients suffer a perioperative complication. Perioperative complications may contribute to cancer recurrence. This study examined the relationship between postoperative complications and risk-adjusted patient overall survival. Methods Data from 2003 to 2009 were linked from our clinical cancer registry, the National Surgery Quality Improvement Project (NSQIP), and medical records. Patients who had tumor extirpation for cure were included. The NSQIP was used to identify complications. Patients with a complication were matched to patients without a complication. χ 2 tests and Cox proportional hazard regression models were used. Results A total of 415 patients were included for survival analysis. The hazard ratio (HR) for mortality associated with having a complication was 2.17. The HR for mortality after 200 days postoperatively was 2.47. Infectious complications were associated with the highest association with increased mortality (HR = 3.56). Noninfectious complications were not associated with an increased risk of mortality. Conclusions This study investigated the relationship of surgical infectious complications in cancer patients with long-term survival for patients who had a number of different types of cancer. After taking into account the site, histology, and stage of the cancer, we found that patients with infectious complications had earlier death.
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Perioperative complications may contribute to cancer recurrence. This study examined the relationship between postoperative complications and risk-adjusted patient overall survival. Methods Data from 2003 to 2009 were linked from our clinical cancer registry, the National Surgery Quality Improvement Project (NSQIP), and medical records. Patients who had tumor extirpation for cure were included. The NSQIP was used to identify complications. Patients with a complication were matched to patients without a complication. χ 2 tests and Cox proportional hazard regression models were used. Results A total of 415 patients were included for survival analysis. The hazard ratio (HR) for mortality associated with having a complication was 2.17. The HR for mortality after 200 days postoperatively was 2.47. Infectious complications were associated with the highest association with increased mortality (HR = 3.56). Noninfectious complications were not associated with an increased risk of mortality. Conclusions This study investigated the relationship of surgical infectious complications in cancer patients with long-term survival for patients who had a number of different types of cancer. 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Perioperative complications may contribute to cancer recurrence. This study examined the relationship between postoperative complications and risk-adjusted patient overall survival. Methods Data from 2003 to 2009 were linked from our clinical cancer registry, the National Surgery Quality Improvement Project (NSQIP), and medical records. Patients who had tumor extirpation for cure were included. The NSQIP was used to identify complications. Patients with a complication were matched to patients without a complication. χ 2 tests and Cox proportional hazard regression models were used. Results A total of 415 patients were included for survival analysis. The hazard ratio (HR) for mortality associated with having a complication was 2.17. The HR for mortality after 200 days postoperatively was 2.47. Infectious complications were associated with the highest association with increased mortality (HR = 3.56). Noninfectious complications were not associated with an increased risk of mortality. 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Perioperative complications may contribute to cancer recurrence. This study examined the relationship between postoperative complications and risk-adjusted patient overall survival. Methods Data from 2003 to 2009 were linked from our clinical cancer registry, the National Surgery Quality Improvement Project (NSQIP), and medical records. Patients who had tumor extirpation for cure were included. The NSQIP was used to identify complications. Patients with a complication were matched to patients without a complication. χ 2 tests and Cox proportional hazard regression models were used. Results A total of 415 patients were included for survival analysis. The hazard ratio (HR) for mortality associated with having a complication was 2.17. The HR for mortality after 200 days postoperatively was 2.47. Infectious complications were associated with the highest association with increased mortality (HR = 3.56). Noninfectious complications were not associated with an increased risk of mortality. 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subjects Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Databases, Factual
Female
Follow-Up Studies
Healthcare Policy and Outcomes
Humans
Infection - mortality
Male
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Middle Aged
Neoplasms - mortality
Neoplasms - surgery
Oncology
Patient Selection
Postoperative Complications - mortality
Prognosis
Surgery
Surgical Oncology
Survival Rate
Young Adult
title Association Between Postoperative Complications and Clinical Cancer Outcomes
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