• Medicine · Feb 2015

    Multicenter Study Comparative Study Observational Study

    Association of comorbidities with postoperative in-hospital mortality: a retrospective cohort study.

    • Felix Kork, Felix Balzer, Alexander Krannich, Björn Weiss, Klaus-Dieter Wernecke, and Claudia Spies.
    • From the Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine (FK, FB, BW, CS), Campus Charité Mitte and Campus Virchow-Klinikum; Department of Biostatistics (AK), Coordination Centre for Clinical Trials, Campus Virchow-Klinikum; and Department of Biometry and SOSTANA GmbH (KDW), Charité-University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2015 Feb 1;94(8):e576.

    AbstractThe purpose of this article is to evaluate the American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status (ASA PS) and the Charlson comorbidity index (CCI) for the prediction of postoperative mortality. The ASA PS has been suggested to be equally good as the CCI in predicting postoperative outcome. However, these scores have never been compared in a broad surgical population. We conducted a retrospective cohort study in a German tertiary care university hospital. Predictive accuracy was compared using the area under the receiver-operating characteristic curves (AUROC). In a post hoc approach, a regression model was fitted and cross-validated to estimate the association of comorbidities and intraoperative factors with mortality. This model was used to improve prediction by recalibrating the CCI for surgical patients (sCCIs) and constructing a new surgical mortality score (SMS). The data of 182,886 patients with surgical interventions were analyzed. The CCI was superior to the ASA PS in predicting postoperative mortality (AUROCCCI 0.865 vs AUROCASAPS 0.833, P < 0.001). Predictive quality further improved after recalibration of the sCCI and construction of the new SMS (AUROCSMS 0.928 vs AUROCsCCI 0.896, P < 0.001). The SMS predicted postoperative mortality especially well in patients never admitted to an intensive care unit. The newly constructed SMS provides a good estimate of patient's risk of death after surgery. It is capable of identifying those patients at especially high risk and may help reduce postoperative mortality.

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