Abstract

BackgroundIn terms of predicting surgery mortality, it is controversial whether red blood cell width works independently. In non-cardiac surgery patients older than 18 years, we intend to examine the relationship between red blood cell width and postoperative 30-day mortality.MethodsIn this retrospective cohort study, 90,785 Singapore General Hospital patients were matched by propensity score between January 1, 2012 and October 31, 2016. It was determined that red blood cell width at baseline and mortality within 30 days after surgery were the independent and dependent variables. We used a non-parametric multivariate logistic regression to balance the confounders among 7807 patients with high RDW and 7807 patients with non-high RDW in the propensity score matching. We investigated the association between RDW and 30-day mortality after surgery using the doubly robust estimation method.ResultsCohorts matched according to propensity score, the risk of 30-day mortality after surgery increased by 114.6.0% among the high RDW group (OR = 2.146, 95% CI 1.645–2.799, P < 0.00001). In the crude model, there was a significant association between RDW and 30-day mortality after surgery (OR = 1.877, 95% CI 1.476–2.388, P < 0.00001). In the propensity-score adjusted model, the risk of 30-day mortality after surgery in the high RDW group compared to the control group was not as high as in the non-adjusted model (OR = 1.867, 95% CI 1.467–2.376, P < 0.00001). Compared to non-high RDW group, the risk of 30-day mortality after surgery increased by 117.0% and 127.7% among high RDW group in the original cohort (OR 2.170, 95% CI 1.754–2.683, P < 0.00001) and the weighted cohort (OR 2.272, 95% CI 2.009–2.580, P < 0.00001), respectively.ConclusionsAccording to the results of this observational, propensity score-matched cohort study, uncontrolled high RDW before surgery is associated with an increased risk of death within 30 days after surgery, that is to say, patients over the age of 18 with high preoperative RDW who undergo non-cardiac surgery have a worse postoperative prognosis than those with normal RDW.

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