The failure to rescue factor: aftermath analyses on 224 cases of perihilar cholangiocarcinoma

AbstractThe term “failure to rescue” (FTR) has been recently introduced in the field of hepato-biliary surgery to label cases in which major postoperative complications lead to postoperative fatality. Perihilar cholangiocarcinoma (PHC) surgery has consistently high postoperative morbidity and mortality rates in which factors associated with FTR are yet to be discovered. The primary endpoint of this study is to compare the Rescue with the FTR cohort referencing patients’ characteristics and management protocols applied. A cohort of 224 consecutive patients undergoing surgery for PHC, between 2010 and 2021 , was enrolled. Perioperative variables were analyzed according to the severity of major postoperative complications (Clavien ≥ 3a). Kaplan–Meier survival analyses were performed to determine complications’ impact on survival. Major complications were reported in 86 cases (38%). Among the major complications’ cohort, 72 cases (84%) were graded Clavien 3a–4 (Rescue group), while 14 (16%) cases were graded Clavien 5 (FTR group). Number of lymph-node metastases (OR = 1.33 (1.08–1.63)p = 0.006), poorly differentiated (G3) adenocarcinoma (OR = 7.55 (1.24–45.8)p = 0.028, reintervention (OR = 16.47 (2.76–98.08)p = 0.002), and prognostic nutritional index <  40 (OR = 3.01 (2.265–3.654)p <  0.001) rates were independent predictors of FTR. Right resection side (OR 2.4 (1.33–4.34)p = 0.004) increased the odds of...
Source: Updates in Surgery - Category: Surgery Source Type: research