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Should we worry about

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Should we worry about. surgical outcomes? Rupert Pearse. Senior Lecturer in Intensive Care Medicine ... Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Should we worry about


1
  • Should we worry about
  • surgical outcomes?
  • Rupert Pearse
  • Senior Lecturer in Intensive Care Medicine
  • William Harvey Research Institute
  • Barts and the London School of Medicine and
    Dentistry

2
  • 234 million major surgical procedures worldwide
  • 4,000 procedures per 100,000 population overall
  • 11,000 procedures per 100,000 in high income
    countries

3
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4
Number of deaths reported by the National
Confidential Enquiry into Peri-Operative Deaths
5
The high-risk surgical patient
  • Elderly
  • Co-morbid disease
  • Major surgery
  • Emergency surgery

6
Mortality in selected UK general surgical
populations Pearse et al. Crit Care 2006 10
R81.
7
Standard and high-risk surgical populations in
the UKPearse et al. Crit Care 2006 10 R81.
8
Mortality following non-cardiac surgery in an NHS
Trust Jhanji et al Anaesthesia 2008 63(7)
695-701
9
Less than 1/3 of high-risk patients are admitted
to critical care
10
Annual figures for the UKhigh-risk surgical
population
  • 1.4 million in-patient general procedures
  • 166,000 high-risk surgical procedures
  • 100,000 patients develop complications
  • 25,000 deaths

11
Quality and process improvement. should be
directed toward prevention of postoperative
complications. Khuri et al. Ann Surg 2005 242
326343
12
Risk prediction for common surgical procedures
performed in the UKAylin et al. BMJ
2007(online first)
13
High-risk surgeryComparison with the cardiac
surgery model
14
UK Cardiac Surgical Register 1977-2000Society
for Cardiothoracic Surgeons of Great Britain
Ireland
15
Why are outcomes so much better for cardiac
surgical patients?
  • Younger / Fitter / Elective
  • Efficient care pathway for single disease group
  • Strong evidence base guides practice
  • Post-operative intensive care is standard
  • Outcome data influences practice

16
The high-risk surgical patientJust a UK
problem?
17
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18
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19
Mortality for common surgical procedures in the
USAKhuri et al. Ann Surg 2005 242 326343.
20
Placebo 72 deaths among 459 patients (16)
Metoprolol 74 deaths among 462 patients (16)
21
Outcomes across the UKComparison of England and
Scotland
22
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23
Number of deaths following emergency surgery
reported by the Scottish Audit of Surgical
Mortality
24
Critical care resources in Scotland and England
25
Surgical admissions to Scottish ICUs in
2006Kerssens J SICSAG 2008 unpublished
dataPearse et al. Crit Care 2006 10 R81.
26
High-risk surgery is an important healthcare
problem
  • Acknowledge the problem
  • Identifying the high-risk patient
  • Effective intervention
  • Adequate resources
  • Quality research
  • Reliable outcome data

27
Summary
  • High-risk surgery is an important healthcare
    problem
  • We need to....
  • Accept we have a problem
  • Better identify those patients at increased risk
  • Post-operative morbidity and mortality
    concentrated in an easily identifiable high-risk
    surgical population

28
Peri-operative ß-blockadePOISE Trial
29
High-risk surgery Not a typical critical illness
  • 56 surgical ICU pts need single or no organ
    support
  • Median ICU stay 1.6 days (all patients)
  • Median hospital stay 16 days (all patients)
  • Strong evidence of infection in 76 patients
  • Pearse et al, Crit Care 2006 10 R81.

30
Pre-operative assessment of cardiovascular risk
31
B-type natriuretic peptide and surgical
outcome Cuthbertson et al. BJA and AJC 2007
32
Anaerobic threshold in high-risk surgical
patientsOlder P et al. Chest 1999 116 355-362.
33
Cardio-Pulmonary Exercise Testing in high-risk
surgical patients
  • Most published data are audits
  • Most studies evaluate VO2max
  • Only one peer reviewed paper on ATT

34
High-risk surgery Specific interventions
  • Sub-maximal exercise testing
  • Peri-operative ß-blockade
  • Overnight Intensive Recovery (OIR) Units
  • Goal Directed Haemodynamic Therapy
  • Non-invasive ventilation
  • Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) philosophy
  • Reliable national audit of surgical outcome

35
Surgical populations in a single NHS
TrustJhanji et al. 2007 unpublished data
36
Admission to Critical Care for non-cardiac surgery
37
Headline findings
  • 12 cases result in gt70 of deaths
  • Only one third of high-risk patients ever reach
    critical care
  • Half the high-risk patients who die never reach
    critical care

38
Headline findings
  • Critical Care provision for elective surgery is
    acceptable but could improve
  • Critical Care provision for emergency surgery is
    unacceptable and must increase
  • Duration of critical care stay remains short
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