Shortness of breath on the day of discharge: an early alert for post-discharge complications in patients undergoing lung cancer surgery

Author:

Kang DanORCID,Lei ChengORCID,Zhang YongORCID,Wei XingORCID,Dai WeiORCID,Xu WeiORCID,Zhang JingyuORCID,Yu QingsongORCID,Su XueyaoORCID,Huang YanyanORCID,Shi QiulingORCID

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Symptom assessment based on patient-reported outcome (PRO) can correlate with disease severity, making it a potential tool for threshold alerts of postoperative complications. This study aimed to determine whether shortness of breath (SOB) scores on the day of discharge could predict the development of post-discharge complications in patients who underwent lung cancer surgery. Methods Patients were from a study of a dynamic perioperative rehabilitation cohort of lung cancer patients focusing on patient-reported outcomes. Patients were assessed using the Perioperative Symptom Assessment Scale for Lung surgery (PSA-Lung). Logistic regression model was used to examine the potential association between SOB on the day of discharge and complications within 3 months after discharge. The post-discharge complications were taken as the anchor variable to determine the optimal cutpoint for SOB on the day of discharge. Results Complications within 3 months post-discharge occurred in 71 (10.84%) of 655 patients. Logistic regression analysis revealed that being female (OR 1.764, 95% CI 1.006–3.092, P < 0.05) and having two chest tubes (OR 2.026, 95% CI 1.107–3.710, P < 0.05) were significantly associated with post-discharge complications. Additionally, the SOB score on the day of discharge (OR 1.125, 95% CI 1.012–1.250, P < 0.05) was a significant predictor. The optimal SOB cutpoint was 5 (on a scale of 0–10). Patients with an SOB score ≥ 5 at discharge experienced a lower quality of life 1 month later compared to those with SOB score<5 at discharge (73 [50–86] vs. 81 [65–91], P < 0.05). Conclusion SOB on the day of discharge may serve as an early warning sign for the timely detection of 3 month post-discharge complications.

Funder

National Key R&D Plan for Intergovernmental Cooperation, the Ministry of Science and Technology of China

Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing, China

Supported by Beijing Xisike Clinical Oncology Research Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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