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- Madison M Ballacchino, Chloe C McQuestion, Matthew S Giuca, Hasan H Dosluoglu, and Nader D Nader.
- Medical Student (MS3), University at Buffalo, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, 955 Main St, Buffalo, NY 14203, U.S.A.
- Ann. Surg. 2024 Jul 23.
ObjectiveOur study aims to examine the role of multi-disciplinary surgical pause committees (MDSPC) in perioperative planning to reduce adverse postoperative events and mortality rates.Summary Background DataFrail patients could benefit from preoperative MDSPCs when utilizing risk-benefit ratios for the proposed surgical plan. We examined whether MDSPCs improved clinical outcomes by developing individualized care plans and stratifying patients based on their level of frailty and ability to overcome external stressors.MethodsWe retrospectively collected patient information after MDSPC evaluation, at our medical center for 12 years since 2011. Patient's frailty risk assessment index (RAI) scores were calculated, and survival status was updated. MDSPCs plans were put into the following categories: proceed with the planned surgery (G1), proceed after medical optimization (G2), reduce invasiveness of surgery or anesthesia plan (G3), or adopt a non-surgical approach (G4). Chi-square and independent t-tests were used for categorical and numerical data, respectively. Survival analysis for 30-day (primary endpoint), one-year, and overall mortality rates used Kaplan-Meier. The alpha was set at 0.05.ResultsClinical information was accessed from 12 women and 382 men. The average age was 71±11 years. 87.3% of planned surgical operations were stratified as ASA class III and IV. RAI scores were 36.4±9.6 (G1), similar to 37.4±10.8 (G2) but lower than 41.4±9.3 (G3) and 44.2±9.7 (G4) (P<0.001). Average survival duration was 35 months (G1), 35 months (G2), both significantly longer than 20 months (G3) and 18 months (G4) (P<0.001).ConclusionMedical optimization improved overall survival and reduced death within 30 days and one year to be comparable to G1. Additionally, reducing the surgical invasiveness only improved survival advantage for six months, after which it was comparable to those in G4 with the worst outcome. RAI scoring is an excellent tool to predict the outcome of surgery, and it was used successfully in critically ill patients.Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
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