Abstract

Background: Choice of the fraction of inspiratory oxygen (FiO2) is controversial. The objective of this analysis was to evaluate whether intraoperative FiO2 was associated with recurrence-free survival after elective cancer surgery.Methods and Analysis: In this single-center, retrospective study, we analyzed 1,084 patients undergoing elective resection of pancreatic (n = 652), colorectal (n = 405), or hepatic cancer (n = 27) at Heidelberg University Hospital between 2009 and 2016. Intraoperative mean FiO2 values were calculated. For unstratified analyses, the study cohort was equally divided into a low- and a high-FiO2 group. For cancer-stratified analyses, this division was done within cancer-strata. The primary outcome measure was recurrence-free survival until the last known follow-up. Groups were compared using Kaplan–Meier analysis. A stratified log rank test was used to control for different FiO2 levels and survival times between the cancer strata. Cox-regression analyses were used to control for covariates. Sepsis, reoperations, surgical-site infections, and cardiovascular events during hospital stay and overall survival were secondary outcomes.Results: Median FiO2 was 40.9% (Q1–Q3, 38.3–42.9) in the low vs. 50.4% (Q1–Q3, 47.4–54.7) in the high-FiO2 group. Median follow-up was 3.28 (Q1–Q3, 1.68–4.97) years. Recurrence-free survival was considerable higher in the high-FiO2 group (p < 0.001). This effect was also confirmed when stratified for the different tumor entities (p = 0.007). In colorectal cancer surgery, increased FiO2 was independently associated with increased recurrence-free survival. The hazard for the primary outcome decreased by 3.5% with every 1% increase in FiO2. The effect was not seen in pancreatic cancer surgery and we did not find differences in any of the secondary endpoints.Conclusions: Until definite evidence from large-scale trials is available and in the absence of relevant clinical conditions warranting specific FiO2 values, perioperative care givers should aim for an intraoperative FiO2 of 50% in abdominal cancer surgery as this might benefit oncological outcomes.

Highlights

  • An increased fraction of inspiratory oxygen (FiO2) is frequently used in anesthesia, intensive care, and emergency medicine

  • Thereafter, the primary outcome was analyzed within the tumor entities PC and Colorectal cancer (CRC) by the Cox proportional hazard model [18] in which the effect of mean Fraction of inspiratory oxygen (FiO2) on recurrence-free survival adjusted for the following covariates was estimated: gender, age, body mass index, nicotine use, diabetes mellitus, UICC (Tumor classification according to the Union for International Cancer Control) stage, tumor localization, tumor grading, resection margin status, use of epidural anesthesia, intraoperative dose of sufentanil, units of red blood cells (RBC), fresh frozen plasma (FFP), and platelet concentrates (PLT) transfused during the entire hospital stay, intraoperative, neoadjuvant and adjuvant radio- and chemotherapy, and laparoscopic surgery in patients with CRC

  • Datasets from 100 patients could not be assessed for eligibility because of incomplete or missing anesthesia records since the patient ID retrieved from the database did not match with a case in the hospital information system, or because the type of surgery was not eligible, i.e., non-tumor surgery

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Summary

Methods and Analysis

In this single-center, retrospective study, we analyzed 1,084 patients undergoing elective resection of pancreatic (n = 652), colorectal (n = 405), or hepatic cancer (n = 27) at Heidelberg University Hospital between 2009 and 2016. The study cohort was divided into a low- and a high-FiO2 group. For cancer-stratified analyses, this division was done within cancer-strata. The primary outcome measure was recurrence-free survival until the last known follow-up. A stratified log rank test was used to control for different FiO2 levels and survival times between the cancer strata. Cox-regression analyses were used to control for covariates. Reoperations, surgical-site infections, and cardiovascular events during hospital stay and overall survival were secondary outcomes

Results
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Study Design and Population
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