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The emergency surgery score (ESS) and outcomes in elderly patients undergoing emergency laparotomy: A post-hoc analysis of an EAST multicenter study

Authors :
Catherine G. Velopulos
Jennifer Rodriquez
Georgia Vasileiou
Mohamad El Moheb
Rachel L. Choron
Cory B. Emmert
Javier Martin Perez
Khaldoun Bekdache
Thomas H. Shoultz
Mbaga S. Walusimbi
Daniel C. Cullinane
Lindsay OʼMeara
Thomas J. Schroeppel
Martin D. Zielinski
Cassandra Decker
D. Dante Yeh
Simon Rodier
Georgios Tsoulfas
Marta L. McCrum
Jose J. Diaz
Zachary Chadnick
Daniel Steadman
Claire Hardman
Brittany Aicher
Firas Madbak
Haytham M.A. Kaafarani
Napaporn Kongkaewpaisan
Majed El Hechi
Vasiliy Sim
Joseph V. Sakran
Maraya Camazine
Mirhee Kim
Jeremy Badach
Ursula Simonosk
Heather Carmichael
David Turay
Natalie Wall
Rishi Rattan
George Black
Vasileios Papadopoulos
Anna Goldenberg-Sanda
Source :
American journal of surgery. 221(5)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Introduction We sought to evaluate whether the Emergency Surgery Score (ESS) can accurately predict outcomes in elderly patients undergoing emergent laparotomy (EL). Methods This is a post-hoc analysis of an EAST multicenter study. Between April 2018 and June 2019, all adult patients undergoing EL in 19 participating hospitals were prospectively enrolled, and ESS was calculated for each patient. Using the c-statistic, the correlation between ESS and mortality, morbidity, and need for ICU admission was assessed in three patient age cohorts (65–74, 75–84, ≥85 years old). Results 715 patients were included, of which 52% were 65–74, 34% were 75–84, and 14% were ≥85 years old; 51% were female, and 77% were white. ESS strongly correlated with postoperative mortality (c-statistic:0.81). Mortality gradually increased from 0% to 20%–60% at ESS of 2, 10 and 16 points, respectively. ESS predicted mortality, morbidity, and need for ICU best in patients 65–74 years old (c-statistic:0.81, 0.75, 0.83 respectively), but its performance significantly decreased in patients ≥85 years (c-statistic:0.72, 0.64, 0.67 respectively). Conclusion ESS is an accurate predictor of outcome in the elderly EL patient 65–85 years old, but its performance decreases for patients ≥85. Consideration should be given to modify ESS to better predict outcomes in the very elderly patient population.

Details

ISSN :
18791883
Volume :
221
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0eee978be53cecfdb31ccb64f8cf506e