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The effect of frailty on short-term outcomes after head and neck cancer surgery. | LitMetric

The effect of frailty on short-term outcomes after head and neck cancer surgery.

Laryngoscope

Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Maryland, U.S.A.

Published: January 2018

Objective: To determine the relationship between frailty and comorbidity, in-hospital mortality, postoperative complications, length of hospital stay (LOS), and costs in head and neck cancer (HNCA) surgery.

Study Design: Cross-sectional analysis.

Methods: Discharge data from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample for 159,301 patients who underwent ablative surgery for a malignant oral cavity, laryngeal, hypopharyngeal, or oropharyngeal neoplasm in 2001 to 2010 was analyzed using cross-tabulations and multivariate regression modeling. Frailty was defined based on frailty-defining diagnosis clusters from the Johns Hopkins Adjusted Clinical Groups frailty-defining diagnosis indicator.

Results: Frailty was identified in 7.4% of patients and was significantly associated with advanced comorbidity (odds ratio [OR] = 1.5[1.3-1.8]), Medicaid (OR = 1.5[1.3-1.8]), major procedures (OR = 1.6[1.4-1.8]), flap reconstruction (OR = 1.7[1.3-2.1]), high-volume hospitals (OR = 0.7[0.5-1.0]), discharge to a short-term facility (OR = 4.4[2.9-6.7]), or other facility (OR = 5.4[4.5-6.6]). Frailty was a significant predictor of in-hospital death (OR = 1.6[1.1-2.4]), postoperative surgical complications (OR = 2.0[1.7-2.3]), acute medical complications (OR = 3.9[3.2-4.9]), increased LOS (mean, 4.9 days), and increased mean incremental costs ($11,839), and was associated with higher odds of surgical complications and increased costs than advanced comorbidity. There was a significant interaction between frailty and comorbidity for acute medical complications and length of hospitalization, with a synergistic effect on the odds of medical complications and LOS in patients with comorbidity who were also frail.

Conclusion: Frailty is an independent predictor of postoperative morbidity, mortality, LOS, and costs in HNCA surgery patients, and has a synergistic interaction with comorbidity that is associated with an increased likelihood of medical complications and greater LOS in patients with comorbidity who are also frail.

Level Of Evidence: 2c. Laryngoscope, 128:102-110, 2018.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/lary.26735DOI Listing

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