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European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, Vol 3, 419-423, Copyright © 1989 by European Association for Cardio-thoracic Surgery
S Griffin, J Desai, M Charlton, E Townsend and SW Fountain
Operative mortality and morbidity following oesophageal resection has
fallen in recent years. We have attempted to identify the factors
responsible for this improvement by reviewing the results of surgery at
this hospital over the last 6 years. Two hundred and two oesophageal
resections were performed between January 1981 and June 1987 for carcinoma.
Of these, 21 patients (10.4%) died before leaving hospital. Fourteen
patients died of multisystem failure, 1 died of pure respiratory failure
and 2 died of renal failure. Two died of surgical causes (other than
anastomotic leak), 1 died of pulmonary embolus and 1 from a
cerebro-vascular accident. No patient died of purely cardiac causes. The
most significant risk factors in those dying (Chi-square test) were:
postoperative respiratory failure, defined as reventilation after initial
successful extubation, (P less than or equal to 0.001), reoperation as an
emergency in the early postoperative period (P less than or equal to
0.001), anastomotic leak (P less than or equal to 0.01) and age over 70 (P
less than or equal to 0.005). Less significant risk factors were chyle leak
and histologically undifferentiated tumour. Of the 181 survivors, 103 left
hospital with no complications of any kind. The mean stay in hospital for
survivors was 15 days. Respiratory infection occurred in 22% of patients,
prolonged gastric stasis in 8%, wound infection in 5% and empyema in 1%. As
long as high risk groups are accepted for radical surgery, operation will
carry a significant mortality in those groups. In others, we believe that
perioperative monitoring and early aggressive treatment of complications
can further reduce mortality and morbidity.
ARTICLES
Factors influencing mortality and morbidity following oesophageal resection
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Harefield Hospital, UK.
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