Does higher ASA-PS class predict post-operative medical complications and mortality in surgical patients?
2,297,629 surgical cases from the ACS-NSQIP database (2005-2012), median age 55 (min = 16, max > 90)
Higher American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status (ASA-PS) class (2-5)
Lower ASA-PS class
Post-operative medical complications and mortalityhard clinical
The ASA-PS classification is a strong, independent predictor of post-operative morbidity and mortality across surgical procedures.
METHODS: The American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status classification system (ASA PS) is a method of characterizing patient operative risk on a scale of 1-5, where 1 is normal health and 5 is moribund. Every anesthesiologist is trained in this measure, and it is performed before every procedure in which a patient undergoes anesthesia. We measured the independent predictive value of ASA-PS for complications and mortality in the ACS-NSQIP database by multivariate regression. We conducted analogous regressions after standardizing ASA-PS to control for interprocedural variations in risk in the overall model and sub-analyses by surgical specialty and the most common procedures. RESULTS: For 2,297,629 cases (2005-2012; median age 55, min = 16, max > 90 90 and above are coded as 90+), at increasing levels of ASA-PS (2-5), odds ratios (OR's) from 2.05 to 63.25 (complications, p < 0.001) and 5.77-2011.92 (mortality, p < 0.001) were observed, with non-overlapping 95% confidence intervals. Standardization of ASA-PS (OR = 1.426 per standard deviation above the mean ASA-PS per procedure, p < .001) and subgroup analyses yielded similar results. DISCUSSION: ASA PS was not only found to be associated with increased morbidity and mortality, but independently predictive when controlling for other comorbidities. Even after standardization based on procedure type, increases in ASA predicted significant increases in complication rates for morbidity and mortality post-operatively. CONCLUSIONS: ASA PS has strong, independent associations with post-operative medical complications and mortality across procedures. This capability, along with its simplicity, makes it a valuable prognostic metric.
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Nicholas Hackett
Gildàsio S. De Oliveira
Umang Jain
International Journal of Surgery
Northwestern University
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Hackett et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69f25f6daf38bc85f975c418 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijsu.2015.04.079