Establishing an association between a peri-operative perfusion score system (PerfSCORE) and post-operative patient morbidity/mortality during CPB cardiac surgery.


Autoria(s): Jegger D.; Revelly J.P.; Horisberger J.; von Segesser L.K.; Ruchat P.
Data(s)

2007

Resumo

BACKGROUND: To date, there is no quality assurance program that correlates patient outcome to perfusion service provided during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). A score was devised, incorporating objective parameters that would reflect the likelihood to influence patient outcome. The purpose was to create a new method for evaluating the quality of care the perfusionist provides during CPB procedures and to deduce whether it predicts patient morbidity and mortality. METHODS: We analysed 295 consecutive elective patients. We chose 10 parameters: fluid balance, blood transfused, Hct, ACT, PaO2, PaCO2, pH, BE, potassium and CPB time. Distribution analysis was performed using the Shapiro-Wilcoxon test. This made up the PerfSCORE and we tried to find a correlation to mortality rate, patient stay in the ICU and length of mechanical ventilation. Univariate analysis (UA) using linear regression was established for each parameter. Statistical significance was established when p < 0.05. Multivariate analysis (MA) was performed with the same parameters. RESULTS: The mean age was 63.8 +/- 12.6 years with 70% males. There were 180 CABG, 88 valves, and 27 combined CABG/valve procedures. The PerfSCORE of 6.6 +/- 2.4 (0-20), mortality of 2.7% (8/295), CPB time 100 +/- 41 min (19-313), ICU stay 52 +/- 62 hrs (7-564) and mechanical ventilation of 10.5 +/- 14.8 hrs (0-564) was calculated. CPB time, fluid balance, PaO2, PerfSCORE and blood transfused were significantly correlated to mortality (UA, p < 0.05). Also, CPB time, blood transfused and PaO2 were parameters predicting mortality (MA, p < 0.01). Only pH was significantly correlated for predicting ICU stay (UA). Ultrafiltration (UF) and CPB time were significantly correlated (UA, p < 0.01) while UF (p < 0.05) was the only parameter predicting mechanical ventilation duration (MA). CONCLUSIONS: CPB time, blood transfused and PaO2 are independent risk factors of mortality. Fluid balance, blood transfusion, PaO2, PerfSCORE and CPB time are independent parameters for predicting morbidity. PerfSCORE is a quality of perfusion measure that objectively quantifies perfusion performance.

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_05B2DFBFB78B

isbn:0267-6591[print], 0267-6591[linking]

pmid:18416215

isiid:000253618700002

doi:10.1177/0267659107084524

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Perfusion, vol. 22, no. 5, pp. 311-316

Palavras-Chave #Aged; Blood Transfusion/mortality; Blood Transfusion/statistics & numerical data; Cardiopulmonary Bypass/mortality; Cardiopulmonary Bypass/standards; Female; Humans; Intensive Care Units/statistics & numerical data; Length of Stay/statistics & numerical data; Linear Models; Male; Middle Aged; Morbidity; Oxygen/blood; Perioperative Care/statistics & numerical data; Prospective Studies; Quality Indicators, Health Care; Respiration, Artificial/statistics & numerical data; Retrospective Studies; Risk Factors; Severity of Illness Index
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article