Patients with cirrhosis are at increased risk of complications following surgery due to multiple factors, including portal hypertension and alterations in hemostasis. Improvements in perioperative management as well as risk stratification scores have helped improve outcomes, but gaps remain in our understanding of the cost and morbidity of cirrhotic patients who undergo surgery. We conducted a case-control study using the IBM Electronic Health Record (EHR) MarketScan Commercial Claims (MSCC) database from January 1, 2007 to December 31, 2017. Nonalcoholic cirrhotic patients who underwent surgery were identified based on International Classification of Diseases,Ninth Revision (ICD-9)/Tenth Revision (ICD-10) codes for multiple surgical categories and matched with controls with cirrhosis who did not undergo surgery in this time period. A total of 115,512 patients were identified with cirrhosis, of whom 19,542 (16.92%) had surgery. Medical history and comorbidities were compiled, and outcomes in the six-month period following surgery were analyzed between matched groups. A cost analysis was performed based on claims data. Nonalcoholic cirrhotic patients who underwent surgery had a higher comorbidity index at baseline compared with controls (1.34 vs. 0.88, P<0.0001). Mortality was increased in the surgery group (4.68% vs. 2.38%, P<0.001) in the follow-up period. The surgical cohort had higher rates of adverse hepatic outcomes, including hepatic encephalopathy (5.00% vs. 2.50%, P<0.0001), spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (0.64% vs. 0.25%, P<0.001), and higher rates of septic shock (0.66% vs. 0.14%, P<0.001), intracerebral hemorrhage (0.49% vs. 0.04%, P<0.001), and acute hypoxemic respiratory failure (7.02% vs. 2.31%, P<0.001). Healthcare utilization analysis revealed increased total claims per patient in the surgical cohort (38.11 vs. 28.64, P<0.0001), higher inpatient admissions (6.05 vs. 2.35, P<0.0001), more outpatient visits (19.72 vs. 15.23, P<0.0001), and prescription claims per patient (11.76 vs. 10.61, P<0.0001) in the postsurgical period. The likelihood of at least one inpatient stay was higher in the surgical cohort (51.63% vs. 22.32%, P<0.0001), and inpatient stays were longer (4.99 days vs. 2.09 days, P<0.0001). The total cost of health services was significantly increased per patient in the postoperative period for patients undergoing surgery ($58,246 vs. $26,842, P<0.0001), largely due to increased inpatient costs ($34,446 vs. $10,789, P<0.0001). Nonalcoholic cirrhotics undergoing surgery experienced worse outcomes with respect to adverse hepatic events and complications, including septic shock and intracerebral hemorrhage. Claims and costanalysis showed a significant increase in health expenditure in the surgical group, largely due to the cost of more frequent and longer inpatient admissions.
Read full abstract