Abdominal emergency surgery in patients over 90 years old: is it worthwhile? An Italian multicenter retrospective study

Authors

  • Antonio Tarasconi Department of Emergency-Surgery, Parma University Hospital, Parma
  • Fausto Catena Department of Emergency-Surgery, Parma University Hospital, Parma
  • Hariscine K. Abongwa Department of Emergency-Surgery, Parma University Hospital, Parma
  • Belinda De Simone Department of Emergency-Surgery, Parma University Hospital, Parma
  • Federico Coccolini Department of General, Emergency and Trauma Surgery, Papa Giovanni XXIII Hospital, Bergamo
  • Luca Ansaloni Department of General, Emergency and Trauma Surgery, Papa Giovanni XXIII Hospital, Bergamo
  • Antonietta Roveran Department of General Surgery, Adria Hospital, Adria (RO)
  • Ferdinando Agresta Department of General Surgery, Adria Hospital, Adria (RO)
  • Marcella Mele Department of General and Trauma Surgery, Maggiore Hospital, Bologna
  • Salomone Di Saverio Department of General and Trauma Surgery, Maggiore Hospital, Bologna
  • Nereo Vettoretto Department of General Surgery, A.O. Mellino Mellini, Chiari (BS)
  • Simone Collura Department of General Surgery, Spedali Civili, Brescia
  • Gianluca Baiocchi Department of General Surgery, Spedali Civili, Brescia
  • Nazario Portolani Department of General Surgery, Spedali Civili, Brescia
  • Massimo Sartelli Department of General Surgery, Macerata Hospital, Macerata
  • Arianna Heyer Department of Medical Sciences, University of California, Berkeley, CA
  • Antonio Biondi Department of General Surgery, University of Catania, Catania

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4081/joper.2016.1

Keywords:

General surgery, survival., nonagenarians, gastrointestinal and emergency surgery, mortality, outcome, survival

Abstract

Unlike other surgical fields, such as cardiac surgery, where many trials have been made about safety, feasibility and outcome of surgical procedures in the elderly, there is lack of literature about emergency abdominal surgery in very old patients, especially in people over 90 years of age. The available data reported survival of about 50% one year after the operation. The aim of the study is to determine the survival rate two years after emergency abdominal surgery in a nonagenarian population and to identify any demographic and surgical parameters that could predict a poor outcome in this type of patient. The study was a retrospective multicenter trial. Patient inclusion criteria were: age 90 years old or older, urgent abdominal surgery. The medical charts reviewed and data collected were: gender, age, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score and comorbidities, diagnosis, time elapsed between arrival to the Emergency Room and admission to the Operatory Room, surgical procedures, open versus laparoscopic procedure, type of anesthesia and outcomes with hospital length of stay. Phone call follow-up was performed for patient discharged alive and Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to evaluate survival. We identified 72 (20 males and 52 females) nonagenarian patients who underwent abdominal emergency surgery at 6 Italian hospitals (Parma, Bergamo, Bologna, Brescia, Chiari, Adria). Mean age was 92.5 years [range 90-100, standard deviation (SD) 2.6], median ASA score was 3 (range 2-5, mean 3.32) and only 7 patients were without comorbidities. Mean hospital length of stay was 13 days (range 1-60, SD 11.52); 56 patients (77.7%) were discharged alive; 2 years survival rate was 23% [mean follow-up=10 months (range 1-27)]. Among all the parameters analyzed, only ASA score was significantly correlated with survival. Neither the presence of malignancy nor the absence of comorbidities seems to correlate with survival. Nonagenarian patients undergoing emergent abdominal surgical procedures have a high overall in-hospital mortality rate (23%) and a low 2 years survival rate (51.4%). Except for ASA score, there are no other factors predicting poor outcome. Based on the present study emergency abdominal surgery in frail patients over 90 years of age has to be carefully evaluated: only 1 out 5 patients will be alive after 2 years.

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Published

2016-07-04

How to Cite

1.
Tarasconi A, Catena F, Abongwa HK, De Simone B, Coccolini F, Ansaloni L, Roveran A, Agresta F, Mele M, Di Saverio S, Vettoretto N, Collura S, Baiocchi G, Portolani N, Sartelli M, Heyer A, Biondi A. Abdominal emergency surgery in patients over 90 years old: is it worthwhile? An Italian multicenter retrospective study. J Peritoneum [Internet]. 2016 Jul. 4 [cited 2024 Sep. 19];1(1). Available from: https://joper.pagepress.net/index.php/joper/article/view/1

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