1. The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program surgical risk calculator is not reliable in predicting complications and length of stay after primary total hip arthroplasty at an institution implementing clinical pathways.
- Author
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Manhabusqui Pacífico G Jr, Viamont-Guerra MR, Antonioli E, Paião ID, Saffarini M, and Pereira Guimarães R
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, Aged, Length of Stay, Risk Assessment, Retrospective Studies, Quality Improvement, Critical Pathways, Reproducibility of Results, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Risk Factors, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip adverse effects, Surgeons, Hypertension complications
- Abstract
Introduction: The authors aimed to: (1) determine how length of stay (LOS) and complication rates changed over the past 10 years, in comparison to values estimated by the ACS-NSQIP surgical risk calculator, at a single private institution open to external surgeons; and (2) determine preoperative patient factors associated with complications., Methods: We retrospectively assessed 1018 consecutive patients who underwent primary elective THA over 10 years. We excluded 87 with tumours and 52 with incomplete records. Clinical data of the remaining 879 were used to determine real LOS and rate of 9 adverse events over time, as well as to estimate these values using the risk calculator. Its predictive reliability was represented on receiver operating characteristic curves. Multivariable analyses were performed to determine associations of complications with age, sex, ASA score, diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, smoking and BMI., Results: Over the 10-year period, real LOS and real complication rates decreased considerably, while LOS and complication rates estimated by the surgical risk calculator had little or no change. The difference between real and estimated LOS decreased over time. The overall estimated and real rates of any complication were respectively 3.3% and 2.8%. The risk calculator had fair reliability for predicting any complications (AUC 0.72). Overall estimated LOS was shorter than the real LOS in 764 (86.9%) patients. Multivariable analysis revealed risks of any complication to be greater in patients aged ⩾75 (OR = 4.36, p = 0.002), and with hypertension (OR = 3.13, p = 0.016)., Conclusions: Since the implementation of clinical pathways at our institution, real LOS and complication rates decreased considerably, while LOS and complication rates estimated by the surgical risk calculator had little or no change. The difference between real and estimated LOS decreased over time, which could lead some clinicians to reconsider their discharge criteria, knowing that advanced age and hypertension increased risks of encountering complications.
- Published
- 2023
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