Frailty as a Risk Predictor of Morbidity and Mortality Following Liver Surgery JOURNAL OF GASTROINTESTINAL SURGERY Gani, F., Cerullo, M., Amini, N., Buettner, S., Margonis, G. A., Sasaki, K., Kim, Y., Pawlik, T. M. 2017; 21 (5): 822-830

Abstract

Given the increasing number of elderly and comorbid patients undergoing surgery, there is increased interest in preoperatively identifying patients at high risk of morbidity and mortality following liver resection. We sought to develop and validate the use of a frailty index (FI) to predict poor postoperative outcomes following liver surgery.Patients undergoing a liver resection were identified using the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Hepatectomy-targeted database for 2014 and randomized into a training or validation cohort. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed to develop a revised frailty index (rFI) to predict adverse postoperative clinical outcomes. Leave one out cross-validation was performed to validate the proposed rFI.A total of 2714 patients were identified who met the inclusion criteria. Postoperatively, 826 patients (30.4%) developed a postoperative complication, while 39 patients died within 30 days of surgery. Five preoperative variables (ASA class, BMI, serum albumin, hematocrit, underlying pathology, and type of liver resection) were used to develop the rFI. The rFI demonstrated good discrimination (AUROC?=?0.68) and outperformed the previously proposed modified frailty index (mFI; AUROC?=?0.53, p?

View details for DOI 10.1007/s11605-017-3373-6

View details for Web of Science ID 000399832800009

View details for PubMedID 28265844