Affiliation:
1. Leeds Institute of Medical Research at St James’s, Clinical Sciences Building, St James’s University Hospital, University of Leeds , Leeds , UK
2. Academic Unit of Health Economics, School of Medicine, University of Leeds , Leeds , UK
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Postoperative complications are common, but there are limited data regarding their implications on patients’ quality of life. This study aimed to address this gap in the literature by analysing the impact of postoperative complications on patients’ health-related quality of life.
Methods
Data from the Perioperative Quality Improvement Programme were analysed, and included patient-level data for 19 685 adults who underwent elective major abdominal procedures in England since 2016. Postoperative complications were graded using the Clavien–Dindo classification. Quality of life was assessed by responses to the EuroQol five-dimension five-levels-of-response (EQ-5D-5L™) questionnaire before surgery, and at 6 and 12 months after operation. Ordinal logistic regression was used to estimate the association between Clavien–Dindo grades and quality of life. Tobit and ordinary least squares regression analyses were used to estimate the quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) loss resulting from postoperative complications between admission and 12 months after surgery.
Results
At 6 and 12 months after surgery, increasingly severe postoperative complications were significantly associated with poorer health-related quality of life. The effect of postoperative complications on quality of life was sustained until at least 12 months after operation. Between admission and 12 months after surgery, 0.012, 0.026, 0.033, and 0.086 QALYs were lost for those experiencing a grade I, II, III, or IV postoperative complication respectively.
Conclusion
Postoperative complications have a significant and sustained effect on patients’ quality of life after surgery; this effect worsens as the severity of the complications increases.
Funder
UK Research and Innovation
Leeds Hospitals Charity
Health Foundation
Royal College of Anaesthetists,
University College London
University College London Hospitals Surgical Outcomes Research Centre
National Institute for Health Research
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
3 articles.
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