Octogenarian patients with head and neck cancer experienced a 4.5% rate of serious complications within 30 days post-surgery, with oncological status associated with an increased risk of complications among those with non-otolaryngological cancer diagnoses.
Observational (n=447)
Yes
Does oncological status increase perioperative risk and adverse outcomes in octogenarian otorhinolaryngology patients compared to non-oncological elderlies?
Octogenarian patients with head and neck cancer have a distinct, higher-risk perioperative profile compared to non-oncological peers, with complication risk best predicted by the Charlson Comorbidity Index rather than the Caprini score.
p-value: p > 0.10
Introduction There is an expanding body of research focuses on the clinical management of patients aged eighty and above. It remains uncertain whether therapeutic approaches for head and neck cancer in this demographic require a higher acceptance of perioperative risk compared to age-matched non-oncological individuals. This study aimed to characterize perioperative risk and early postoperative outcomes in octogenarian patients with and without head and neck cancer, and to explore how different geriatric and surgical risk scales perform in predicting adverse events in these two subgroups. Methods This retrospective analysis encompassed data from eight university-affiliated otorhinolaryngology departments in Poland, covering the period from September 2023 to August 2024. Results The oncological cohort exhibited a markedly higher prevalence of risk factors: male sex, smoking history, and previous malignancies compared with non-oncological cohort. Patients with head and neck cancer also demonstrated substantially elevated results on the Caprini, Charlson Comorbidity Index, American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status Classification, and Venous Thromboembolism scales, indicating increased multimorbidity and surgical risk. Although hospitalization durations were numerically longer for oncological cases, this difference was not statistically significant, and both groups showed similar functional independence and frailty scores. Logistic regression analyses highlighted that complication risk in non-oncological group was best predicted by Caprini scores, whereas the comorbidity index was the most informative predictor in oncological group. Cross-applied models failed to reach significance, confirming distinct risk patterns. Overall, sixteen percent of patients experienced at least one major complication, with oncological status independently associated with increased risk. Discussion These findings demonstrate the multifactorial landscape of perioperative risk among the oldest surgical patients and provide quantitative evidence to support population-specific preoperative strategies in geriatric oncology.
Wierzbicka et al. (Thu,) conducted a observational in Head and Neck Cancer in octogenarians (n=447). Octogenarian patients with head and neck cancer experienced a 4.5% rate of serious complications within 30 days post-surgery, with oncological status associated with an increased risk of complications among those with non-otolaryngological cancer diagnoses.