Most deaths related to non-cardiac surgery occur after surgery
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It's the recovery period, not the operating room that is risky for patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery, according to a large international study led by McMaster University. Based on patients at 28 health centres in 13 countries, the results show less than one per cent of deaths of these patients occurred in the operating room, but 29 per cent of deaths occurred after discharge from hospital.
It’s the recovery period, not the operating room that is risky for patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery, according to a large international study led by McMaster University.
Based on patients at 28 health centres in 13 countries, the results show less than one per cent of deaths of these patients occurred in the operating room, but 29 per cent of deaths occurred after discharge from hospital.
The study was published today in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
“Given that most deaths in adults undergoing non-cardiac surgery occur not in the operating room, but afterwards, efforts to improve postsurgical care in hospital and at home has substantial potential to reduce mortality,” said senior author P.J. Devereaux, professor of the departments of health research methods, evidence, and impact, and medicine at McMaster and scientist at the Population Health Research Institute.
The data comes from the Vascular Events in Non-cardiac Surgery Patients Cohort Evaluation (VISION) study.
The study, which included 40,004 adults aged 45 years or older in North and South America, Asia, Europe, Africa and Australia who underwent surgery between 2007 and 2013, found that 1.8 per cent died within 30 days of non-cardiac surgery. Major bleeding, injury to the heart muscle and severe infection (sepsis) accounted for a large portion of deaths (45 per cent).
“Approximately 100 million adults aged 45 or older undergo non-cardiac surgery worldwide every year, therefore an estimated 1.8 million people die of complications within 30 days,” said Devereaux. “This means that death after surgery is a major global health burden.”
The authors suggest that solutions focused on prevention, early identification and close management of bleeding, cardiac issues and infection may help to reduce these preventable deaths.
The study is funded by more than 70 sources.
Read the paper here: http://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.190221.
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