Effects of the COVID‐19 pandemic on short‐term postoperative outcomes of emergency surgery for gastroduodenal perforation: A nationwide study in Japan based on the National Clinical Database

Author:

Ogawa Shimpei12ORCID,Endo Hideki3ORCID,Yoshida Masahiro14,Tsuru Tomomitsu15,Itabashi Michio12,Yamamoto Hiroyuki3,Kakeji Yoshihiro67ORCID,Ueno Hideki68ORCID,Kitagawa Yuko910,Hibi Taizo1112ORCID,Taketomi Akinobu1113,Ikeda Norihiko1114,Mori Masaki1115

Affiliation:

1. The Japanese Society for Abdominal Emergency Medicine Tokyo Japan

2. Department of Surgery, Institute of Gastroenterology Tokyo Women's Medical University Tokyo Japan

3. Department of Healthcare Quality Assessment, Graduate School of Medicine The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

4. Department of HBP and Gastrointestinal Surgery International University of Health and Welfare Ichikawa Japan

5. Department of Medical Education and Training Shin‐Koga Hospital Kurume Fukuoka Japan

6. Database Committee The Japanese Society of Gastroenterological Surgery Tokyo Japan

7. Division of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Department of Surgery Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine Kobe Hyogo Japan

8. Department of Surgery National Defense Medical College Tokorozawa Saitama Japan

9. The Japanese Society of Gastroenterological Surgery Tokyo Japan

10. Department of Surgery Keio University School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

11. The Japan Surgical Society Tokyo Japan

12. Department of Pediatric Surgery and Transplantation Kumamoto University Graduate School of Medical Sciences Kumamoto Kumamoto Japan

13. Department of Gastroenterological Surgery I Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine Sapporo Hokkaido Japan

14. Department of Surgery Tokyo Medical University Tokyo Japan

15. School of Medicine Tokai University Isehara Kanagawa Japan

Abstract

AbstractAimTo examine the potential negative effects of the COVID‐19 pandemic on short‐term postoperative outcomes of emergency surgery for gastroduodenal perforation in Japan.MethodsA total of 7973 cases of gastroduodenal perforation from 2019 to 2021 were retrieved from the National Clinical Database (NCD), which includes >95% of surgical cases in Japan. Data were analyzed nationally and in subgroups for subjects in areas with high infection levels (HILs). Postoperative 30‐d mortality, surgical mortality, and complications (Clavien–Dindo (CD) grade ≥3) were examined. Months were considered to have significantly high or low mortality or complication rates, if the 95% confidence interval (CI) of the standardized mortality (morbidity) ratio (SMR) does not contain 1.ResultsNationally, data from 2019 vs 2020 and 2021 showed 30‐d mortality of 175 (6.7%) vs 398 (7.4%), surgical mortality of 250 (9.5%) vs 537 (10.1%), and complications (CD ≥3) of 558 (21.2%) vs 1163 (21.8%). Among these data, the only significantly high SMR was found for complications in July 2020 (1.36 [95% CI: 1.001–1.80]). In areas with HILs, data from 2019 vs 2020 and 2021 indicated 30‐d mortality of 91 (6.3%) vs 215 (7.3%), surgical mortality of 135 (9.4%) vs 294 (10.0%), and complications (CD ≥3) of 304 (21.1%) vs (23.1%). In these data, no month had a significantly high SMR.ConclusionThe COVID‐19 pandemic had few negative effects on outcomes after surgery for gastroduodenal perforation. These findings suggest that the emergency system for gastroduodenal perforation in Japan was generally maintained during the pandemic.

Funder

Ministry of Health Mexico

Publisher

Wiley

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