Annals of surgery
-
To evaluate the impact of persistent opioid use (POU) following surgery or trauma on health outcomes using linked data. ⋯ Among opioid-naive patients who received opioids after surgery or trauma, POU was associated with worse outcomes, including increased mortality. Further investigation is warranted to understand the reasons for continued opioid use beyond 90 days and mechanisms associated with harm.
-
To evaluate whether drain fluid amylase levels on day-1 (DFA1) and day-3 (DFA3) can reliably estimate the risk of clinically relevant-postoperative pancreatic fistula (CR-POPF) following pancreatoduodenectomy (PD) compared to either value alone or in combination with clinicopathologic variables. ⋯ Risk of CR-POPF following pancreatoduodenectomy can be accurately estimated based on measurement of DFA1 and DFA3. Our CR-POPF kinetics calculator can facilitate postoperative risk stratification and guide drain management algorithms.
-
To determine whether the timing of parathyroid surgery impacts the risk of renal stone retreatment and cardiovascular interventions. ⋯ In symptomatic pHPT, delaying PTX significantly increases the risk of requiring future stone retreatment and cardiac/vascular surgical interventions. This highlights the importance of early surgical referral and multidisciplinary approaches to optimize outcomes and resource utilization in pHPT.
-
We sought to compare post-discharge outcomes and healthcare utilization between English-speaking non-Hispanic White (NHW), English-speaking Hispanic/Latinx (ESHL), and Spanish-speaking Hispanic/Latinx (SSHL) survivors of traumatic injury. ⋯ Hispanic/Latinx injury survivors have worse post-discharge outcomes and lower non-injury-related healthcare utilization than NHW if they have limited English-language proficiency. Addressing LEP-related barriers to care could help mitigate outcome and healthcare utilization disparities among Hispanic/Latinx injury survivors.
-
We sought to define the association of privilege on rates of unplanned surgery and perioperative outcomes for access-sensitive surgical conditions. ⋯ Privilege was associated with rates of unplanned surgery and adverse clinical outcomes. This indicates the role privilege as a key SDOH that influences patient access to and quality of surgical care.