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Published in: Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 9/2020

01-09-2020 | Pancreatoduodenostomy | Original Article

Composite Length of Stay, An Outcome Measure of Postoperative and Readmission Length of Stays in Pancreatoduodenectomy

Authors: Gregory A. Williams, Jingxia Liu, William C. Chapman, William G. Hawkins, Ryan C. Fields, Dominic E. Sanford, Majella B. Doyle, Chet W. Hammill, Adeel S. Khan, Steven M. Strasberg

Published in: Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | Issue 9/2020

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Abstract

Purpose

Postoperative length of stay (PLOS) and readmission rate are pancreatoduodenectomy (PD) outcome measures, which are reported individually but may be interrelated. The purpose of this study was to evaluate how well a composite length of stay measure (CLOS) that included PLOS and readmission length of stay describes outcomes. To do so, we evaluated how well CLOS correlated to postoperative complications absolutely and compared to PLOS.

Methods

A total of 668 PDs performed between 2011 and 2018 were evaluated. CLOS was calculated from PLOS and readmission length of stay. Complication severity was judged by the Modified Accordion Grading System (MAGS). Multinomial logistical regression models (MLRM) were used to investigate the relationship between either PLOS or CLOS and complications. Multilevel and pairwise area under curves (AUC) using SAS macro %MultAUC were provided for both models.

Results

A total of 432 of 668 patients (65%) developed complications. One hundred seventy-seven patients (27%) were readmitted. Mean PLOS was 10.2 days (7.1 SD) and mean CLOS was 12.3 days (10.1 SD). PLOS and CLOS both were correlated linearly to MAGS grade. Spearman correlation coefficient for CLOS vs. MAGS of 0.68 was higher than that of 0.49 for PLOS vs. MAGS. Multilevel AUC from MLRM using PLOS was 0.66, but multilevel AUC from MLRM using CLOS was 0.71.

Discussion

CLOS provides an accurate estimate of hospital day utilization per patient for PD, reflecting not only the basal hospital recovery time for PD but the added time needed because of readmissions due to complications. It is tightly correlated to number and severity of postoperative complications.
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Metadata
Title
Composite Length of Stay, An Outcome Measure of Postoperative and Readmission Length of Stays in Pancreatoduodenectomy
Authors
Gregory A. Williams
Jingxia Liu
William C. Chapman
William G. Hawkins
Ryan C. Fields
Dominic E. Sanford
Majella B. Doyle
Chet W. Hammill
Adeel S. Khan
Steven M. Strasberg
Publication date
01-09-2020
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery / Issue 9/2020
Print ISSN: 1091-255X
Electronic ISSN: 1873-4626
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-019-04475-8

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