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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Complications after liver surgery: a benchmark analysis.

TLDR
Risk-adjusted BMVs are likely much more applicable and appropriate in assessing "acceptable" benchmark outcomes following liver surgery as well as other factors influence the risk of complications following hepatectomy.
Abstract
Background The best achievable short-term outcomes after liver surgery have not been identified. Several factors may influence the post-operative course of patients undergoing hepatectomy increasing the risk of post-operative complications. We sought to identify risk-adjusted benchmark values [BMV] for liver surgery. Methods The National Surgery Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) database was used to develop Bayesian models to estimate risk-adjusted BMVs for overall and liver related (post-hepatectomy liver failure [PHLF], biliary leakage [BL]) complications. A separate international multi-institutional database was used to validate the risk-adjusted BMVs. Results Among the 11,243 patients included in the NSQIP database, the incidence of complications, PHLF, and BL was 36%, 5%, and 8%, respectively. The risk-adjusted BMVs for complication (range, 16–72%), PHLF (range, 1%–20%), and BL (range, 4%–22%) demonstrated a high variability based on patients characteristics. When tested using an international database including nine institutes, the risk-adjusted BMVs for complications ranged from 26% (Institute-4) to 43% (Institute-1), BMVs for PHLF between 3% (Institute-3) and 12% (Institute-5), while BMVs for BL ranged between 5% (Institute-4) and 9% (Institute-7). Conclusions Multiple factors influence the risk of complications following hepatectomy. Risk-adjusted BMVs are likely much more applicable and appropriate in assessing “acceptable” benchmark outcomes following liver surgery.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal hepatic surgery: Are we making progress in North America?

TL;DR: In this article, the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database was queried to determine whether optimal outcomes have increased in recent years and whether minimally invasive hepatic surgery has increased.
Journal ArticleDOI

Short-Term Outcomes of Patients Undergoing Portal Vein Embolization: an ACS-NSQIP Procedure-Targeted Hepatectomy Analysis.

TL;DR: Among patients who underwent PVE before hepatectomy, the risk of postoperative complications was 1.6-fold higher than non-PVE patients, and after PSM, PVE patients still had an increased risk of complications.

Apport des mesures morphométriques vasculaires dans la prédiction du risque d’insuffisance hépatique post-opératoire après hépatectomies droites simples ou élargies

TL;DR: La principale cause de deces est le risque d’insuffisance hepatique post-operatoire (IHPO) liee a une insuffisance de parenchyme restant, mais aucun n’est assez sensible et specifique pour etre utilise en pratique.
Journal ArticleDOI

Classification of Adverse Events in Adult Surgery

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors proposed a novel surgical quality metric tools (benchmark cutoffs and textbook outcomes) which provide procedure-specific ideal surgical outcomes in a subgroup of well-defined low-risk patients, with the aim of setting realistic and best achievable goals for surgeons and centers, as well as supporting unbiased comparison of surgical quality between centers and periods of time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expansion of iNKT Cells Promotes Liver Repair Following Hepatic Ischemia Reperfusion Injury

TL;DR: Repopulation of hepatic iNKT cells promotes liver repair by stimulating macrophage phenotype switching in the late phase of hepatics I/R injury.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Classification of surgical complications: a new proposal with evaluation in a cohort of 6336 patients and results of a survey.

TL;DR: The new complication classification appears reliable and may represent a compelling tool for quality assessment in surgery in all parts of the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Clavien-Dindo classification of surgical complications: five-year experience.

TL;DR: This 5-year evaluation provides strong evidence that the classification of complications is valid and applicable worldwide in many fields of surgery, and subjective, inaccurate, or confusing terms such as “minor or major” should be removed from the surgical literature.