Abstract

Little information is available about postdischarge adverse events after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Inpatient and 90-day postdischarge adverse events were identified for Medicare patients discharged in 2009-2010 after undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy on day 0, 1, or 2 of hospitalization at facilities that performed 20 or more laparoscopic cholecystectomies during the study period. A predictive length of stay (LOS) linear regression model was derived and used to identify patients with prolonged LOS (prLOS) whose risk-adjusted LOS exceeded a 3σ upper limit on a moving average control chart. Rates of inpatient and 90-day fatal and nonfatal adverse events and interrelationships among different outcomes and alternative outcome measures were explored. Of 89,639 study cases, 0.7% died during their index hospitalization, and 1.3% died within 90days of discharge. Of live discharges, 8.0% had prLOS, and 42.1% had coded complication. In the 90days after discharge, 9,416 (10.6%) were readmitted. Patients who were prLOS outliers were more likely to die or be readmitted than nonoutliers (P<.0001; χ(2)). More than 18% of Medicare patients undergoing presumably low-risk elective inpatient laparoscopic cholecystectomy died, had a severe inpatient complication, or were readmitted within 90days of discharge.

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