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Postop pneumonia risk strong for subset of thoracic surgery patients


 

AT THE ACS NSQIP NATIONAL CONFERENCE

SAN DIEGO – For thoracic surgery patients, being on neoadjuvant chemotherapy, having chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and a weight loss of greater than 10% were all associated with the development of postoperative pneumonia, results from a single-center study showed.

At the national conference of the American College of Surgeons/National Surgical Quality Improvement Program, Dr. Elisabeth Dexter noted that after the first ACS/NSQIP data harvest at the Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, N.Y., the risk of postoperative pneumonia was found to be 4.4%, compared with a rate of 1.1% in all other NSQIP hospitals.

"Of particular note, the thoracic surgery service had a high incidence of 13.2%," said Dr. Dexter, an attending surgeon in the department of thoracic surgery at the Institute. "The high incidence of our postoperative pneumonia was likely [affected] by our thoracic surgery service because our thoracic surgery service had an increased percentage of the abstracted NSQIP data in our cohort, from 12% to 14%, compared with other NSQIP hospitals of similar academic size abstracting 2%. When we found this high postoperative pneumonia rate, we decided to query our NSQIP data and our tumor registry between July 1, 2011, and Oct. 8, 2012, to ask the question: Is there an increased incidence of postoperative pneumonia in thoracic surgery patients who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy compared with those who did not?"

Dr. Elisabeth Dexter

Dr. Dexter and her associates cross-referenced ACS/NSQIP data on 1,723 patients at the cancer center with the tumor registry. Of the 1,723 patients, 1,645 had no postoperative pneumonia while 78 did. Compared with the non-pneumonia patients, those who had pneumonia tended to be older (a mean of 67 vs. 60 years, respectively; odds ratio, 1.05; P less than .001), more likely to be male (59% vs. 37%; OR, 2.48; P less than .001), have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (35% vs. 9%; OR, 5.08; P less than .001), be a smoker (36% vs. 24%; OR, 1.75; P = .021), and had lost more than 10% of body weight (10% vs. 2.5%; OR, 4.47; P less than .001).

On univariate analysis, postoperative pneumonia was associated with being on neoadjuvant chemotherapy (4.2% vs. 14%; OR, 3.75; P less than .001).

In addition, certain surgical subspecialties at the Institute had a high incidence of postoperative pneumonia, including thoracic surgery (46%), GI surgery (21%), and gynecology (12%).

When the researchers included the entire cohort of patients, those who were on neoadjuvant therapy had an increased incidence of postoperative pneumonia, compared with those who were not on neoadjuvant chemotherapy (P = .001). When thoracic surgery patients were excluded from the analysis, non-thoracic surgery patients who were on neoadjuvant chemotherapy had no increased incidence of postoperative pneumonia, compared with the patients who were not on neoadjuvant chemotherapy (P = .681). On multivariate analysis, significant variables associated with postoperative pneumonia were being on neoadjuvant chemotherapy (P= .001), having chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (P less than .0001), and having weight loss of greater than 10% (P = .004).

"Institutions with disproportionately busy complex thoracic surgery programs may have rates of postoperative pneumonia skewed higher than predicted by NSQIP models," Dr. Dexter concluded. "Optimization of nutritional status and COPD treatment in neoadjuvant chemotherapy patients may reduce postoperative pneumonia risk and incidence. Balance of oncologic benefit of neoadjuvant chemotherapy versus risk and morbidity of postoperative chemotherapy warrants future study in thoracic surgery patients."

Dr. Dexter said that she had no relevant financial conflicts to make.

dbrunk@frontlinemedcom.com

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