• Minerva anestesiologica · Mar 2024

    Postoperative cognitive worsening in seniors with an age above life expectancy: a prospective longitudinal study.

    • Gabriele Melegari, Enrico Giuliani, Suela Osmenaj, Silvio Malaguti, Michele Zoli, Stefano Meletti, Elisabetta Bertellini, Luciana Mascia, and Alberto Barbieri.
    • Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, Modena University Hospital, Modena, Italy - melegari.gabriele@aou.mo.it.
    • Minerva Anestesiol. 2024 Mar 1; 90 (3): 135143135-143.

    BackgroundThe growing number of elderly patients in hospitals is a challenge for healthcare systems. The main objective is to measure the postoperative change in the cognitive status at hospital discharge and one year after discharge in elderly patients undergoing planned or deferrable surgery.MethodsWe planned a prospective longitudinal study, single-center study: secondary care level hospital, enrolment from September 2018 to May 2019. We enroll elderly patients, aged above life expectancy in Italy, who underwent planned or deferrable surgery (men over 80.5 years old, women over 85.0 years old). In six months, we enrolled 76 eligible patients. We collected the scores of the clinical impairment scales Charlson Index, Barthel Index, and Six-Item Cognitive Impairment Test (6CIT). The primary endpoint was the postoperative worsening of the cognitive status at one-year follow-up. Secondary endpoints aimed to describe postoperative disabilities and complications, to investigate possible risk factors for cognitive worsening, and to measure the role of anesthesia in cognitive changes.ResultsWe recorded an increased rate of pathological 6CIT values during the hospitalization period, rising from 39.47% to 55.26% (McNemar test, P=0.007), and this rate was still increased at 55.56% (P=0.021) one year after discharge. Anesthesia did not show any significant harmful effect on cognitive status. The preoperative hemoglobin value seems to be a risk factor for cognitive status and one-year mortality.ConclusionsElderly patients had a significantly worse 6CIT value after planned surgery, which may derive in part from age and in part from hospitalization. It is difficult to determine if general anesthesia alone has no harmful effects on cognitive performance in patients at discharge and one year later. Further data are necessary.

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