Outcome Predictors for Endoscopic Sinus Surgery

Author:

Wang Pa-Chun12,Chu Chia-Chen13,Liang Shu-Cheng13,Tai Chih-Jaan145

Affiliation:

1. Taiwan, Republic of China

2. Department of Public Health, China Medical College, Taichung

3. Department of Health, Taipai

4. Department of Otolaryngology, Cathay General Hospital, Taipai

5. Department of Otolaryngology, China Medical College Hospital, and the Department of Medicine, China Medical College.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The outcomes management of endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) is a major effort to improve the quality of chronic sinusitis treatment. The objective of this study was to investigate the factors that may predict a variety of outcomes of ESS. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Two hundred and thirty consecutive patients who underwent ESS were prospectively evaluated by computerized axial tomography scan of the sinus and a validated chronic sinusitis survey (CSS) before surgery. The effects of prognostic factors were then investigated. RESULTS: Extent of disease was a consistent predictor ( P < 0.05) for bleeding, complication occurrence, medical resource utilization, subjective sinus-specific health status, and physicians' objective evaluation of surgical outcomes. The preoperative CSS total score and extent of disease significantly ( P < 0.05) predicted the postoperative CSS total score. Subjective and objective outcomes were significantly correlated ( r = 0.58, P = 0.0001). These findings suggested the necessity of disease severity stratification when reporting ESS outcomes. CONCLUSION: Operation-related events, medical resource utilization, physician evaluation, and sinus-specific health status of patients are all integral parts of reporting outcomes of ESS. We have concluded that computerized axial tomography scan of the sinuses and CSS are efficient ways of providing reliable baseline information before ESS.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Otorhinolaryngology,Surgery

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