AI Article Synopsis

  • In 2020, the European Association of Urology introduced a new classification system named EAUiaiC to better grade intraoperative adverse events during urology surgeries, specifically aimed at kidney tumor procedures.
  • A study was conducted in Finland reviewing 749 radical and 531 partial nephrectomies to validate the EAUiaiC, finding that 13.8% of radical nephrectomy patients and 6.4% of partial nephrectomy patients experienced intraoperative adverse events, primarily due to bleeding.
  • The results showed significant links between adverse events and factors like tumor size and surgical approach, highlighting that the EAUiaiC classification is effective in identifying risks, with bleeding being a critical concern in

Article Abstract

Introduction: The European Association of Urology committee in 2020 suggested a new classification, intraoperative adverse incident classification (EAUiaiC), to grade intraoperative adverse events (IAE) in urology.

Aims: We applied and validated EAUiaiC, for kidney tumor surgery.

Patients And Methods: A retrospective multicenter study was conducted based on chart review. The study group comprised 749 radical nephrectomies (RN) and 531 partial nephrectomies (PN) performed in 12 hospitals in Finland during 2016-2017. All IAEs were centrally graded for EAUiaiC. The classification was adapted to kidney tumor surgery by the inclusion of global bleeding as a transfusion of ≥3 units of blood (Grade 2) or as ≥5 units (Grade 3), and also by the exclusion of preemptive conversions.

Results: A total of 110 IAEs were recorded in 13.8% of patients undergoing RN, and 40 IAEs in 6.4% of patients with PN. Overall, bleeding injuries in major vessels, unspecified origin and parenchymal organs accounted for 29.3, 24.0, and 16.0% of all IEAs, respectively. Bowel ( = 10) and ureter ( = 3) injuries were rare. There was no intraoperative mortality. IAEs were associated with increased tumor size, tumor extent, age, comorbidity scores, surgical approach and indication, postoperative Clavien-Dindo (CD) complications and longer stay in hospital. 48% of conversions were reactive with more CD-complications after reactive than preemptive conversion (43 vs. 25%).

Conclusions: The associations between IAEs and preoperative variables and postoperative outcome indicate good construct validity for EAUiaiC. Bleeding is the most important IAE in kidney tumor surgery and the inclusion of transfusions could provide increased objectivity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21681805.2022.2089228DOI Listing

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