Current smoking is associated with an increased risk of mortality and other adverse outcomes following major surgery, but past smoking is not, according to a report published online June 19 in JAMA Surgery.
Current smoking correlates with these adverse outcomes even in patients who don’t have obvious smoking-related disease such cardiovascular disease, chronic pulmonary disorders, or cancer, which suggests that smoking may exert its deleterious effects through acute or subclinical chronic vascular and respiratory pathologic mechanisms, said Dr. Khaled M. Musallam of the American University of Beirut (Lebanon) Medical Center and his associates.
Current smoking is associated with an increased risk of mortality and other adverse outcomes following major surgery, but past smoking is not, according to a recent report published in JAMA Surgery.
Since smoking cessation has clear benefits on morbidity and mortality in the surgical setting, "surgical teams should be more involved in the ongoing efforts to optimize measures for smoking control," they wrote.
"Surgery provides a teachable environment for smoking cessation. Unlike the long-term consequences of smoking, the acute consequences of smoking on patients’ postoperative outcomes can provide a strong motive for quitting," the investigators said.
Dr. Musallam and his colleagues examined the effect of smoking on surgical outcomes using data from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP), which includes a registry that provides feedback to participating hospitals regarding 30-day risk-adjusted surgical morbidity and mortality.
For this study, they analyzed data on 607,558 patients undergoing major surgery at more than 200 participating hospitals during a 2-year period in the United States, Canada, Lebanon, and the United Arab Emirates. The mean age of the patients was 56 years (range, 16-90 years); 43% were men and 57% were women.
A total of 125,192 patients (21%) were current smokers and 78,763 (13%) were past smokers who had quit at least 1 year before surgery. The remaining patients had never smoked.
Only current smokers showed an increased likelihood of 30-day mortality. They also were at greater risk for adverse arterial events such as MI or stroke, as well as for adverse respiratory events such as pneumonia, need for intubation, and need for a ventilator, within 30 days of surgery, the investigators said (JAMA Surg. 2013 June 19 [doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2013.2360]).
The higher risk of these adverse outcomes occurred with smokers across all age groups but was particularly notable among those older than age 40 years. It was seen in both sexes, among those undergoing inpatient as well as outpatient procedures, in patients who had general as well as other types of anesthesia, across a variety of surgical subspecialties, and in both elective and emergency surgery cases.
The association between current smoking and adverse outcomes also remained robust in a sensitivity analysis, Dr. Musallam and his associates said.
There was a dose-response effect in an analysis of patients’ smoking history, with the likelihood of adverse arterial and respiratory events increasing in tandem with increasing pack-years of smoking, but even current "light" smokers who had fewer than 10 pack-years of smoking history were at increased risk for postoperative mortality and morbidity.
"These findings encourage ongoing efforts to implement smoking cessation programs," Dr. Musallam and his associates said.
"Early intervention in heavy smokers is warranted, especially because the effect of smoking on postoperative arterial and respiratory morbidity seems to be dose dependent. However, because smokers with a cigarette smoking history of less than 10 pack-years are also at risk of postoperative death, recent and light smokers should also be targeted," they suggested.
Dr. Musallam and his associates reported no financial conflicts of interest.