Abstract

BackgroundIn low- and middle-income countries emergency surgery represents a higher proportion of the total number of surgeries and is associated with greater morbidity/mortality. Study aims were to determine if emergency department length of stay (ED-LOS) was associated with adverse perioperative outcomes and if such association varied across patient’s risk categories.MethodsA retrospective cohort study was conducted of adult patients who underwent orthopedic or abdominal emergency surgery at two Colombian University hospitals. The population comprised a mix of a representative sample of eligible cases, with unselected patients (2/3), enriched with a high-risk subset (1/3). ED-LOS was defined as the interval between emergency department arrival and surgery start time. Our primary outcome was an adverse perioperative outcome during hospitalization, which was a composite of in-hospital mortality or severe complications such as major cardiovascular adverse events, infection, renal failure and bleeding.ResultsAmong 1487 patients analyzed, there were 519 adverse perioperative outcomes including 150 deaths. In the unselected sample (n = 998) 17.9% of patients presented an adverse perioperative outcome with a mortality of 4.9%. The median ED-LOS was 24.6 (IQR 12.5–53.2) hours. ED-LOS was associated with age, comorbidities and known risk factors for 30-day mortality. Patients developing an adverse perioperative outcome started surgery 27.1 h later than their counterparts. Prolonged ED-LOS increased the risk of an adverse perioperative outcome in patients without risk factors (covariate-adjusted OR = 2.52), while having 1–2 or 3+ risk factors was negatively associated (OR = 0.87 and 0.72, respectively, p < 0.001 for the interaction).ConclusionProlonged ED-LOS is associated with increased adverse perioperative outcome for patients without risk factors for mortality, but seems protective and medically justified for more complex cases.

Highlights

  • In low- and middle-income countries emergency surgery represents a higher proportion of the total number of surgeries and is associated with greater morbidity/mortality

  • A large international study reported that Emergency surgery (ES) represented 11% of all non-cardiac surgeries, which contrasts with data from Colombian centers that participated in such study, where a significantly higher ES rate (43%) was found and associated with a 3.5-fold increase in 30-day mortality [3]

  • Center A admitted more often complex patients, emergency departments (ED)-length of stay (LOS) were similar among centers

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Summary

Introduction

In low- and middle-income countries emergency surgery represents a higher proportion of the total number of surgeries and is associated with greater morbidity/mortality. Emergency surgery (ES) is associated with significantly higher morbidity and mortality when compared with elective procedures [1,2,3,4]. ES represents a relatively high fraction of the total surgical procedures [9]. A large international study reported that ES represented 11% of all non-cardiac surgeries, which contrasts with data from Colombian centers that participated in such study, where a significantly higher ES rate (43%) was found and associated with a 3.5-fold increase in 30-day mortality [3]

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