The number of comorbidities as an important cofactor to ASA class in predicting postoperative outcome: An international multicentre cohort study

Author:

Grob Christian A.1ORCID,Angehrn Luzius W.2,Kaufmann Mark1,Hahnloser Dieter3,Winiker Michael3,Erb Thomas O.4,Joller Sonja4,Schumacher Philippe5,Bruppacher Heinz R.6,O'Grady Gregory7,Murtagh Jonathon7,Gawria Larsa8,Albers Kim9,Meier Sonja10,Heilbronner Samuel Anna R.1,Schindler Christian11,Steiner Luzius A.112,Dell‐Kuster Salome11213

Affiliation:

1. Clinic for Anaesthesia, Intermediate Care, Prehospital Emergency Medicine and Pain Therapy University Hospital Basel Basel Switzerland

2. Medical Faculty University of Basel Basel Switzerland

3. Department of Visceral Surgery University Hospital Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

4. University Children's Hospital of Basel Basel Switzerland

5. Department of Anaesthesiology Bürgerspital Solothurn Solothurn Switzerland

6. Department of Anaesthesiology Schulthess Clinic Zurich Switzerland

7. Department of Surgery Auckland City Hospital Auckland New Zealand

8. Department of Surgery Radboud University Medical Centre Nijmegen The Netherlands

9. Department of Anaesthesiology Radboud University Medical Centre Nijmegen The Netherlands

10. Department of Anaesthesiology Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Trust London UK

11. Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute Basel Switzerland

12. Department of Clinical Research University of Basel Basel Switzerland

13. Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Prevention Institute University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMultimorbidity is a growing burden in our ageing society and is associated with perioperative morbidity and mortality. Despite several modifications to the ASA physical status classification, multimorbidity as such is still not considered. Thus, the aim of this study was to quantify the burden of comorbidities in perioperative patients and to assess, independent of ASA class, its potential influence on perioperative outcome.MethodsIn a subpopulation of the prospective ClassIntra® validation study from eight international centres, type and severity of anaesthesia‐relevant comorbidities were additionally extracted from electronic medical records for the current study. Patients from the validation study were of all ages, undergoing any type of in‐hospital surgery and were followed up until 30 days postoperatively to assess perioperative outcomes. Primary endpoint was the number of comorbidities across ASA classes. The associated postoperative length of hospital stay (pLOS) and Comprehensive Complication Index (CCI®) were secondary endpoints. On a scale from 0 (no complication) to 100 (death) the CCI® measures the severity of postoperative morbidity as a weighted sum of all postoperative complications.ResultsOf 1421 enrolled patients, the mean number of comorbidities significantly increased from 1.5 in ASA I (95% CI, 1.1–1.9) to 10.5 in ASA IV (95% CI, 8.3–12.7) patients. Furthermore, independent of ASA class, postoperative complications measured by the CCI® increased per each comorbidity by 0.81 (95% CI, 0.40–1.23) and so did pLOS (geometric mean ratio, 1.03; 95% CI, 1.01–1.06).ConclusionsThese data quantify the high prevalence of multimorbidity in the surgical population and show that the number of comorbidities is predictive of negative postoperative outcomes, independent of ASA class.

Publisher

Wiley

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