Association between preoperative albumin and length of hospital stay in non-cardiac surgery patients with pulmonary hypertension: A secondary retrospective analysis

Author:

Wang Shu12,Xue Zhouya34,Su Dan12,Ji Lin12,Gao Yuanyuan12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Affiliated Hospital 6 of Nantong University, Department of Anesthesiology, Yancheng City, Jiangsu Province, China

2. Affiliated Yancheng Third People’s Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology, Yancheng City, Jiangsu Province, China

3. Affiliated The First people's Hospital of Yancheng, Department of Anesthesiology, Yancheng City, Jiangsu Province, China

4. Affiliated The Yancheng Clinical College of Xuzhou Medical University, Department of Anesthesiology, Yancheng City, Jiangsu Province, China.

Abstract

To explore the risk factors affecting the length of hospital stay (LOS) as well as to examine the relationship between preoperative serum albumin levels and LOS following non-cardiac, non-obstetric surgery in patients with pulmonary hypertension (PHTN). This study represents a secondary retrospective analysis based on 287 non-cardiac, non-obstetric procedures performed on 195 PTHN patients at a single institution in the USA between 2007 and 2013. The primary outcome was the LOS. We conducted a multiple logistic regression analysis to compare the LOS between the 2 groups, divided at a serum albumin level of 3.5 g/dL. After adjusting for multiple covariates, the ORs for the long length of stay (LOS > 7 days) for the high group(albumin > 3.5 g/dL) compared with the low group (albumin ≤ 3.5 g/dL) were 0.35 (95%CI: 0.21~0.6), 0.41 (95%CI: 0.22 ~0.76), 0.41 (95%CI: 0.18~0.94) from model 2 to model 4. The stratified analysis results indicate that these findings are stable (p for trend > 0.05). In this study, it was observed that low levels of preoperative albumin were associated with an increased risk of prolonged hospital stay after non-cardiac, non-obstetric surgery in patients with PHTN. This implies that optimizing preoperative nutrition could potentially reduce the LOS for non-cardiac, non-obstetric surgery in patients with PHTN.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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