骨科肿瘤手术患者常见合并症及4种合并症指标比较

IF 4.4 1区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Shalin S Patel, Theresa Nalty, Douglas H Fletcher, Timothy S Ballard, Spencer J Frink, Justin E Bird, Valerae O Lewis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:合并症指数用于帮助估计患者的住院时间、护理费用、结局和死亡率。它们越来越多地被纳入报销模式。合并症指标在骨科肿瘤手术患者中的适用性尚未得到研究。本研究的目的是确定骨科肿瘤手术患者的主要合并症,并评估这些指标的预测价值。方法:回顾性收集2014年1月至2023年3月300例骨科肿瘤手术患者的人口学特征、诊断及术前合并症。本研究随机选取3个亚组,每组100例恶性原发性骨肿瘤、恶性原发性软组织肿瘤或骨转移性疾病患者。根据Charlson共病指数(CCI)、美国国家老龄研究所/国家癌症研究所(NIA/NCI)指数、van Walraven指数和美国卫生保健研究与质量机构(AHRQ)指数的指导方针,对共病进行了制表和加权。采用双尾双变量Pearson相关性来评估指标之间以及各指标与患者预后之间的关系。我们的患者人群中的合并症与其他研究中发表的合并症进行了比较。结果:接受骨科肿瘤手术患者的主要合并症是高血压、缺乏性贫血、转移性疾病、近期意外体重减轻或体重不足以及液体或电解质紊乱。患有某些合并症的患者比例超过了其他癌症、骨科和住院患者的比例。在评估我们的患者群体时,这4项合并症指标具有可变相关性。在我们的患者样本中,合并症的数量和所有指标的加权评分与住院时间和生存率几乎没有相关性。结论:接受骨科肿瘤手术的患者中许多合并症的发生率高于其他患者群体。常用指标之间表现出变量相关性。使用这些工具,在我们的患者群体中,合并症和患者预后之间几乎没有相关性。在这些工具中认为具有保护作用的合并症可能低估了接受骨科肿瘤手术的患者合并症的真实评估。这突出了开发工具以正确评估特定患者群体中的合并症的重要性,特别是因为这些模型用于设定衡量患者结果的基准;评估质量、效率和安全;确定报销标准。证据等级:预后III级。有关证据水平的完整描述,请参见作者说明。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Common Comorbidities and a Comparison of 4 Comorbidity Indices in Patients Undergoing Orthopaedic Oncology Surgery.

Background: Comorbidity indices are used to help to estimate patients' length of hospital stay, care costs, outcomes, and mortality. Increasingly, they are considered in reimbursement models. The applicability of comorbidity indices to patients undergoing orthopaedic oncology surgery has not been studied. The purpose of this study was to determine the predominant comorbidities in patients undergoing orthopaedic oncology surgery and to evaluate the predictive value of these indices.

Methods: Patient demographic characteristics, diagnoses, and preoperative comorbidities were collected retrospectively on 300 patients undergoing orthopaedic oncology surgery between January 2014 and March 2023. In this study, 3 subsets of 100 patients each with malignant primary bone tumors, malignant primary soft-tissue tumors, or osseous metastatic disease were randomly selected. Comorbidities were tabulated and weighted according to the guidelines of the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), the National Institute on Aging/National Cancer Institute (NIA/NCI) index, the van Walraven Index, and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Index. Two-tailed bivariate Pearson correlations were performed to assess the relationship between the indices and between each index and patient outcomes. Comorbidities in our patient population were compared with those published in other studies.

Results: The predominant comorbidities in patients undergoing orthopaedic oncology surgery were hypertension, deficiency anemias, metastatic disease, recent unintended weight loss or being underweight, and fluid or electrolyte disorders. The percentage of patients with certain comorbidities exceeded those reported in other cancer, orthopaedic, and inpatient populations. The 4 comorbidity indices had variable correlation when assessing our patient population. The number of comorbidities and the weighted scores from all indices demonstrated little to no correlation with length of stay and survival in our patient sample.

Conclusions: The prevalence of many comorbidities in patients undergoing orthopaedic oncology surgery is greater than those reported in other patient populations. Commonly utilized indices demonstrate variable correlation with one another. With these tools, there was little to no correlation between comorbidities and patient outcomes in our patient population. The comorbidities deemed protective in these tools may underestimate the true assessment of the comorbidities in patients undergoing orthopaedic oncology surgery. This highlights the importance of developing tools to properly assess the comorbidities in defined patient populations, especially as these models are used to set benchmarks for measuring patient outcomes; assessing quality, efficiency, and safety; and determining reimbursement criteria.

Level of evidence: Prognostic Level III . See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
7.50%
发文量
660
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery (JBJS) has been the most valued source of information for orthopaedic surgeons and researchers for over 125 years and is the gold standard in peer-reviewed scientific information in the field. A core journal and essential reading for general as well as specialist orthopaedic surgeons worldwide, The Journal publishes evidence-based research to enhance the quality of care for orthopaedic patients. Standards of excellence and high quality are maintained in everything we do, from the science of the content published to the customer service we provide. JBJS is an independent, non-profit journal.
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