And even when the effect of chemotherapy for those who did receive it was added into the survival models, patients with serious complications still had significantly worse overall survival, Dr. Nathan noted.
“Serious complications after these three cancer resections are common and they are associated with dramatically inferior long-term survival. Thirty, 60, 90, and even 180-day measures of mortality do not capture the full impact of complications on long-term survival,” he said.
Asked whether it may be possible to identify those patients at higher risk for serious complications due to comorbidities or other factors, and perhaps suggest withholding surgery from such patients, Dr. Nathan agreed, but added that “the best chance for survival for all of these patients is a high-quality surgical resection, so it’s hard to deny a patient that chance unless you think they have a really high risk of perioperative death.”
The study was internally funded. Dr. Nathan reported no significant disclosures.