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Never giving up: Outcomes and presentation of emergency general surgery in geriatric octogenarian and nonagenarian patients
The American Journal of Surgery
  • Adil A Shah, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston
  • Syed Nabeel Zafar, Howard University College of Medicine, Washington
  • Lisa M Kodadek, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore
  • Cheryl K Zogg, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston
  • Alyssa B Chapital, Mayo Clinic, Mayo Blvd, Phoenix
  • Aftab Iqbal, Howard University College of Medicine, Washington
  • Wendy R Greene, Howard University College of Medicine, Washington
  • Edward E Cornwell, Howard University College of Medicine, Washington
  • Joaquim Havens, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Boston
  • Adil H Haider, Mayo Clinic, USA
Publication Date
8-1-2016
Document Type
Article
Abstract

Background: Aging of the population necessitates consideration of the increasing number of older adults requiring emergency care. The objective of this study was to compare outcomes and presentation of octogenarian and/or nonagenarian emergency general surgery (EGS) patients with younger adults.
Methods: Based on a standardized definition of EGS, patients in the 2007 to 2011 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project-Nationwide Inpatient Sample were queried for primary EGS diagnoses. Included patients were categorized into older (≥80 years) vs younger (<80 >years) adults based on a marked increase in mortality around aged 80 years. Using propensity scores, risk-adjusted differences in major morbidity, mortality, length of stay (LOS), and cost were compared.
Results: Of 3,707,465 included patients, 17.2% (n = 637,588) were ≥80 years. Relative to younger adults, older patients most frequently presented for gastrointestinal-bleeding (odds ratio [95% confidence intervals]: 2.81 [2.79 to 2.82]) and gastrostomy care (2.46 [2.39 to 2.53]). Despite higher odds of mortality (1.67 [1.63 to 1.69]), older adults exhibited lower risk-adjusted odds of morbidity (.87 [.86 to .88]), shorter LOS (4.50 vs 5.14 days), and lower total hospital costs ($10,700 vs $12,500).
Conclusions: Octogenarian and/or nonagenarian patients present differently than younger adults. Reductions in complications, LOS, and cost among surviving older adults allude to a "survivorship tendency" to never give up, despite collectively higher mortality risk.

Comments

This work was published before the author joined Aga Khan University

Citation Information
Adil A Shah, Syed Nabeel Zafar, Lisa M Kodadek, Cheryl K Zogg, et al.. "Never giving up: Outcomes and presentation of emergency general surgery in geriatric octogenarian and nonagenarian patients" The American Journal of Surgery Vol. 212 Iss. 2 (2016) p. 211 - 220
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/adil_haider/43/