Associations Between Preoperative Risk, Postoperative Complications, and 30-Day Mortality

World J Surg. 2022 Oct;46(10):2365-2376. doi: 10.1007/s00268-022-06638-2. Epub 2022 Jul 1.

Abstract

Background: Comorbidities and postoperative complications increase mortality, making early recognition and management critical. It is useful to understand how they are associated with one another. This study assesses associations between comorbidities, complications, and mortality.

Methods: We calculated associations between comorbidities, complications, and 30-day mortality using the 2012-2018 ACS-NSQIP database. We examined the association between mortality and number of complications which complications were most associated with mortality.

Results: 5,777,108 patients were included. 30-day mortality was 0.95%. For most comorbidities or postoperative complications, patients with these had higher mortality than patients without. Having ≥ 1 complication increased mortality risk by 32.5-fold (6.5% vs. 0.2%). Mortality rate significantly increased with increasing number of complications, particularly after two or more complications. Bleeding and sepsis were associated with the most deaths.

Conclusion: The 30-day mortality rate was < 1% but was 32-fold higher in patients with complications and increased rapidly for patients with ≥ 2 complications. Bleeding and sepsis were the most prominent complications associated with mortality.

MeSH terms

  • Comorbidity
  • Databases, Factual
  • Humans
  • Postoperative Complications* / etiology
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Risk Factors
  • Sepsis* / complications