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European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Vol 10, 641-648, Copyright © 1996 by European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
R Forster, S Toth, K Redmann, A Heinecke and HH Scheld
OBJECTIVE: The results of surgical therapy can only be accurately judged if
the patients' characteristics and their impact on the outcome are known.
The purpose of this study was to identify the risk factors of contemporary
thoracic surgery, which could serve as a basis for a risk-matched
comparison of different surgical techniques. METHODS: The data of 15
patients' undergoing thoracic surgery were prospectively documented. The
outcome of the various operative procedures applied was statistically
correlated with the access procedure, sex, age, body mass, dignity of
underlying disease and six concomitant diseases. RESULTS: Four patients
died within 30 days of surgery (mortality: 2.6%). Morbidity comprising all
complications (class I) and morbidity comprising only complications of
consequence for postoperative therapy (class II) rose with the number of
concomitant diseases (50%/0% with no concomitant disease, 89%/33% with more
than three concomitant diseases). Univariate testing identified malignant
disease (P = 0.002), male sex (P = 0.003), body mass index of less than 20
and more than 27 kg/m of the expected level according to the Quetelet rule
(P = 0.013) and a combination of concomitant respiratory and
cardiocirculatory disease (P = 0.022) as being associated with class I
morbidity. Male sex was significantly coincident with class II morbidity (P
= 0.020). Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that these
characteristics also had independent influence on class I morbidity (P =
0.022, P = 0.001, P = 0.023, P = 0.028). CONCLUSION: It is concluded that
these characteristics are important predictors of morbidity of thoracic
surgery. If a non-randomized comparison of the outcome of thoracic
operations or different access strategies like thoracotomy or thoracoscopy
is intended, at least these patient features should be documented and used
as a basis for matching pairs.
ARTICLES
A prospective risk analysis of contemporary thoracic surgery
Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Westfalische Wilbelms University, Munster, Germany.
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