Abstract

IntroductionOne view of value in medicine is outcome relative to cost of care provided. With respect to operative care, increased attention has been placed on evaluation and optimization of patients prior to undergoing an elective surgery. We examined more than 2 million patients having elective, non-cardiac surgery to assess the incidence and utility of pre-operative hemostatic screening, compared with a composite of history variables that may indicate a propensity for bleeding, to assess several important outcomes of surgery.Materials & MethodsWe queried the NSQIP database to identify 2,020,533 patients and compared hemostatic tests (PT, aPTT, platelet count) and history covariables indicative of potential for abnormal hemostasis. We compared outcomes across predictor values; used Person’s chi-square tests to compare differences, and logistic regression to model outcomes.ResultsApproximately 36% of patients had all three tests pre-operatively while 16% had none of them; 11.2% had a history predictive of potential abnormal bleeding. Outcomes of interest across the cohort included death in 0.7%, unplanned return to the operating room or re-admission within 30 days in 3.8% and 6.2% of patients; 5.3% received a transfusion during or after surgery. Sub-analyses in each of the nine surgical specialties’ most common procedures yielded similar results.ConclusionThe limited predictive value of each hemostatic screening test, as well as excess costs associated with them, across a broad spectrum of elective surgeries, suggests that limiting pre-operative testing to a more select group of patients may be reasonable, equally efficacious, efficient, and cost-effective.

Highlights

  • One view of value in medicine is outcome relative to cost of care provided

  • This study evaluated the medical records of all patients who underwent elective, non-cardiac surgery included in the American College of Surgeon (ACS) National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) database between 2006 and 2012

  • This study is the first to measure the rate of preoperative testing in a very large subset (>2 million subjects, from 2006 to 2012) of the population of US patients undergoing common types of major, elective, non-cardiac surgery, followed by hospitalization, who were evaluated prospectively, with verified 30-day outcomes; as well as the first to assess the utility of common laboratory screening, compared with the use of simple features of a patient’s history that might indicate potentially abnormal hemostasis, across several, clinically-relevant operative outcomes, both across the larger population studied as well as in the most common surgical procedures performed in nine, non-cardiac specialties

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Summary

Introduction

One view of value in medicine is outcome relative to cost of care provided. With respect to operative care, increased attention has been placed on evaluation and optimization of patients prior to undergoing an elective surgery. We examined more than 2 million patients having elective, non-cardiac surgery to assess the incidence and utility of pre-operative hemostatic screening, compared with a composite of history variables that may indicate a propensity for bleeding, to assess several important outcomes of surgery

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