MP63-01 MODIFIED FRAILTY INDEX PREDICTS MORTALITY AND ADVERSE OUTCOMES IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING RENAL SURGERY: ANALYSIS OF THE NATIONAL SURGICAL QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM (NSQIP) DATABASE

2015 ◽  
Vol 193 (4S) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamie S. Pak ◽  
Danny Lascano ◽  
Julia B. Finkelstein ◽  
Mark V. Silva ◽  
G. Joel DeCastro ◽  
...  
2006 ◽  
Vol 72 (11) ◽  
pp. 994-998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shukri F. Khuri

The Institute of Medicine 1999 publication, To Err is Human, focused attention on preventable provider errors in surgery, and prompted numerous new national initiatives to improve patient safety. It is uncertain whether these initiatives have actually improved patient safety, mainly because of the lack of a quantitative metric for the assessment of patient safety in surgery. A 15-year experience with the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program, which originated in the Veteran's Administration in 1991 and was recently made available to the private sector, prompts the surgical community to place patient safety in surgery within a much larger conceptual framework than that of the Institute of Medicine report, and provides a quantitative metric for the assessment of patient safety initiatives. This conceptual framework defines patient safety in surgery as safety from all adverse outcomes (not only preventable errors and sentinel events); regards safety as an integral part of quality of surgical care; recognizes that adverse outcomes, and hence patient safety, are primarily determined by quality of systems of care; and uses comparative risk-adjusted outcome data as a metric for the identification of system problems and for the assessment and improvement of patient safety from adverse outcomes.


2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (7_suppl) ◽  
pp. 374-374
Author(s):  
Max Kates ◽  
Hiten Patel ◽  
Nikolai Sopko ◽  
Jen-Jane Liu ◽  
Phillip M Pierorazio ◽  
...  

374 Background: Frailty has been identified as a marker of physiologic reserve, and a more accurate predictor of adverse postoperative outcomes compared with age. Although many definitions of frailty exist, recently a clinical predictive rule, the “modified frailty index”(mFI), has been developed utilizing administrative data to predict adverse outcomes in the lung cancer population undergoing lobectomy. Our goal was to validate this clinical rule among patients with bladder cancer undergoing cystectomy. Methods: Patients undergoing cystectomy were identified from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) participant use files (2006-2011). The mFI was defined as in prior studies with 11 variables based on mapping the Canadian Study of Health and Aging Frailty Index to NSQIP comorbidities and activities of daily living (ADL)s. These 11 variables each received 1 point, and the sum was divided by 11 for a fraction between 0 and 1. Univariate χ2, independent sample t-test, and logistic regression analyses were performed where appropriate. Results: Of the 1,302 cystectomy patients identified, 30% had mFI of 0, 40% had mFI of 0.09, 21% had mFI of 0.18, and 9% had mFI ≥0.27. Overall, 56% of patients experienced a Clavien complication. Patients with mFI ≥0.27 were older ( 72 vs 64 yrs)and more likely to be smokers (54%) compared with mFI of 0 (30%, p<0.01). Mean operative times (342-349 minutes) were similar across mFI indices. Reoperation (5% vs 8.5%) and readmission (20.5% vs 25%) were higher when mFI =0 compared with mFI≥0.27 (P<0.01). Clavien 4 and above complications occurred in 9.1% (36/396), 10.1% (53/526), 12.9 % (35/270) and 13.6% (15/110) among patients with an mFI of 0, 0.09, 0.18, and ≥0.27, respectively (p=0.05). Similarly, the overall mortality rate increased from 2.5% in the lowest frailty index group to 5.4% in the highest. Conclusions: Among patients undergoing cystectomy, the modified frailty index can identify those patients at greater risk for severe complications, readmissions, and mortality. Given that bladder cancer is increasing in prevalence particularly among the elderly, pre-operative risk stratification is crucial to inform decision-making.


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