Critical Care Medicine: June 2016 -
Volume 44 - Issue 6 - p 1091–1097
Nabozny, M J et al
Objectives: Surgical patients often receive routine
postoperative mechanical ventilation with excellent outcomes. However, older
patients who receive prolonged mechanical ventilation may have a significantly
different long-term trajectory not fully captured in 30-day postoperative
metrics. The objective of this study is to describe patterns of mortality and
hospitalization for Medicare beneficiaries 66 years old and older who have
major surgery with and without prolonged mechanical ventilation. Design:
Retrospective cohort study. Setting: Hospitals throughout the United States.
Patients: Five percent random national sample of elderly Medicare beneficiaries
(age ≥ 66 yr) who underwent 1 of 227 operations previously defined as high risk
during an inpatient stay at an acute care hospital between January 1, 2005, and
November 30, 2009. Interventions: None. Measurements and Main Results: We
identified 117,917 episodes for older patients who had high-risk surgery; 4%
received prolonged mechanical ventilation during the hospitalization. Patients
who received prolonged mechanical ventilation had higher 1-year mortality rate
than patients who did not have prolonged ventilation (64% [95% CI, 62–65%] vs
17% [95% CI, 16.4–16.9%]). Thirty-day survivors who received prolonged
mechanical ventilation had a 1-year mortality rate of 47% (95% CI, 45–48%).
Thirty-day survivors who did not receive prolonged ventilation were more likely
to be discharged home than patients who received prolonged ventilation 71%
versus 10%. Patients who received prolonged ventilation and were not discharged
by postoperative day 30 had a substantially increased 1-year mortality
(adjusted hazard ratio, 4.39 [95% CI, 3.29–5.85]) compared with patients
discharged home by day 30. Hospitalized 30-day survivors who received prolonged
mechanical ventilation and died within 6 months of their index procedure spent
the majority of their remaining days hospitalized. Conclusions: Older patients
who require prolonged mechanical ventilation after high-risk surgery and
survive 30 days have a significant 1-year risk of mortality and high burdens of
treatment. This difficult trajectory should be considered in surgical decision
making and has important implications for surgeons, intensivists, and patients.
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