Abstract

C-reactive protein levels are frequently raised in patients with major complications following elective colorectal surgery and used as a predictor for complications. The significance of raised C-reactive protein levels to predict outcome in emergency colorectal surgery is unclear, because preoperative C-reactive protein levels are often raised. The aim of this study was to determine whether serum C-reactive protein is an adequate predictive marker for major postoperative complications after colorectal surgery in an acute setting. This is an observational cohort study of all patients undergoing colorectal surgery. Consecutive patients undergoing colorectal surgery with reconstruction via anastomosis and/or stoma from January 2009 to March 2014 were included. This study was conducted at VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam. Postoperative C-reactive protein levels, operative details, and postoperative complications were recorded to determine the differences in C-reactive protein as a marker for complications in emergency and elective colorectal surgery. A total of 724 patients underwent colorectal resection, 559 elective cases and 165 emergency cases. A major complication was observed in 176 of 724 patients (24.3%). Major complications were observed more often in patients who underwent emergency surgery, 37% versus 20.9% after elective resections. C-reactive protein levels were significantly higher preoperatively in patients operated on in an acute care setting and on the first two postoperative days; from the third postoperative day, no statistically significant differences were found in C-reactive protein levels. This study was limited by its observational nature. Although acute colorectal surgery is associated with higher C-reactive protein levels in the first 2 postoperative days, this study shows that postoperative C-reactive protein levels may be used as a predictor for complications in both acute and elective surgery from the third postoperative day onward. It is hypothesized that the stimulus for C-reactive protein production is removed during surgery, and, with a short-half-life of 19 hours, C-reactive protein levels drop to similar levels as seen in patients undergoing elective surgery.

Full Text
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