The Association Between Intra- and Post-Operative Surgical Complications and Clinical and Economic Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Open Right Colectomy in the US
Author(s)
Johnson B1, Gutierrez M2, Anand d P3, Johnston S4
1Johnson & Johnson, Lincoln, NH, USA, 2Johnson & Johnson, Raritan, NJ, USA, 3Mu Sigma, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India, 4Johnson & Johnson, Annapolis, MD, USA
OBJECTIVES: To quantify the association between intra- and post-operative surgical complications and clinical and economic outcomes for patients undergoing open right colectomy in the U.S.
METHODS: Retrospective cohort study using the PINC AITM Healthcare Database. The study included patients who underwent inpatient open right-sided colorectal surgery between January 2016 and December 2022 (first=index). Surgical complications included anastomotic leak and bleeding measured at index. Outcomes included postoperative length of stay, total hospital costs, and all-cause 30-day readmissions. Multivariable generalized linear models were used to quantify the association of surgical complications with the study outcomes, adjusting for patient, procedural, hospital, and provider characteristics.
RESULTS: The study comprised 61,466 patients; mean age 65.7 (SD=15.6) years and 55.2% female. Most patients were of white (78.7%) or African American (12.5%) race. The majority of patients had Medicare coverage (60.1%), followed by commercial (25.6%), Medicaid (8.7%), or other (5.6%). The incidence proportions of anastomotic leak and bleeding were 6.3% and 15.4%, respectively. Total hospital costs among patients with evidence of anastomotic leak were 63.5% higher than patients without ($49,582 v $30,317) and 42.1% higher among patients with evidence of bleeding than patients without ($42,014 v $29,564), both p<0.001. The length of stay among patients with evidence of anastomotic leak was 73.8% longer than patients without (15.5 v 8.9 days) and 34.2% longer among patients with evidence of bleeding than patients without (11.9 v 8.9 days), both p<0.001. The 30-day readmission rates among patients with evidence of anastomotic leak were 17.9% higher than patients without (18.7% v 15.9%) and 17.7% higher among patients with evidence of bleeding than patients without (18.3% v 15.6%), both p<0.001.
CONCLUSIONS: In this large retrospective study of patients undergoing open right colectomy in the U.S., surgical complications were common and associated with a significant clinical and economic burden.
Conference/Value in Health Info
Value in Health, Volume 27, Issue 12, S2 (December 2024)
Code
CO128
Topic
Clinical Outcomes, Economic Evaluation, Study Approaches
Topic Subcategory
Clinical Outcomes Assessment
Disease
Gastrointestinal Disorders, Surgery