Author:
Boyev Artem,Azimuddin Ahad,Prakash Laura R.,Newhook Timothy E.,Maxwell Jessica E.,Bruno Morgan L.,Arvide Elsa M.,Dewhurst Whitney L.,Kim Michael P.,Ikoma Naruhiko,Lee Jeffrey E.,Snyder Rebecca A.,Katz Matthew H.G.,Tzeng Ching-Wei D.
Abstract
Objective:
Within a learning health system paradigm, this study sought to evaluate reasons for readmission to identify opportunities for improvement.
Summary Background Data:
Post-pancreatectomy readmission rates have remained constant despite improved index hospitalization metrics.
Methods:
We performed a single-institution case-control study of consecutive pancreatectomy patients (October 2016 - April 2022). Complications were prospectively graded in biweekly faculty and advanced practice provider meetings. We analyzed risk factors during index hospitalization and categorized indications for 90-day readmissions.
Results:
A total of 835 patients, median age 65 years and 51% (427/835) males, underwent 64% (534/835) pancreatoduodenectomies, 34% (280/835) distal pancreatectomies, and 3% (21/835) other resections. 24% (204/835) of patients were readmitted. Primary indication for readmission was technical in 51% (105/204), infectious in 17% (35/204), and medical/metabolic in 31% (64/204) of patients. Procedures were required in 77% (81/105) and 60% (21/35) of technical and infectious readmissions, respectively, while 66% (42/64) of medical/metabolic readmissions were managed non-invasively. During the index hospitalization, benign pathology (OR 1.8, P=0.049), biochemical pancreatic leak (OR 2.3, P=0.001), bile/gastric/chyle leak (OR 6.4, P=0.001), organ-space infection (OR 3.4, P=0.007), undrained fluid on imaging (OR 2.4, P=0.045), and increasing white blood cell count (OR 1.7, P=0.045) were independently associated with odds of readmission.
Conclusions:
Most readmissions following pancreatectomy were technical in origin. Patients with complications during index hospitalization, increasing white blood cell count, or undrained fluid before discharge were at highest risk for readmission. Pre-discharge risk-stratification of readmission risk factors and augmentation of in-clinic resources may be strategies to reduce readmission rates.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献