Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Esophageal food impaction is a commonly encountered clinical scenario that may warrant emergent intervention, but epidemiological studies are lacking. No major studies have examined the inpatient prevalence of food impaction during the weekend. Therefore, the aim of our study is to assess the inpatient prevalence of food impaction during the weekend compared to week days. METHODS: Case-control study using the NIS 2016, the largest public inpatient database in the US. All patients with ICD10CM codes for food bolus impactions were included. None were excluded. The primary outcome was determining the odds of food bolus impaction during the weekend days as compared to the weekdays. Secondary outcomes included determining rates of esophageal perforation, hospital costs, charges and length of stay (LOS) when comparing admissions during a weekend to admissions during a weekday. Multivariate regression analyses were used to adjust for age, gender, Charlson Comorbidity Index, income in patient zip code, hospital region, location, size and teaching status. RESULTS: 7,025 patients with food bolus impaction were identified. 2,475 underwent emergent EGD (within 24 hours) and 1,935 were admitted during the weekend. Mean patient age was 66.7 years (47.9% were female). Primary outcome: after adjusting for confounders, patients admitted for food impaction displayed significantly higher odds of admission during the weekend days (aOR:1.5, P < 0.01) when compared to the weekdays. No significant difference in esophageal perforation was observed between the two cohorts. Patients admitted during the weekend displayed lower hospitalization costs compared to patients admitted during the weekdays (aMean: -$1,756, P = 0.02), but no differences in hospitalization charges or length of stay were observed. All outcomes are displayed in Table 1. CONCLUSION: The odds of being admitted for esophageal food impaction are higher on weekends than weekdays. There are no different odds of esophageal perforation. This may be reflecting the previous studies demonstrating increased odds of food impaction during leisure times, as weekends in the US are often reserved for leisure activities rather than work. Interestingly, patients admitted during the weekend actually have lower adjusted mean hospital costs. This may suggest that these patients are likely admitted for observation or stay longer periods of time in the ED and hence do not generate the same hospital bill as an admission.

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