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Description

Join our Emergency General Surgery Team as they discuss EGS in patients > 65. 



Introduction

- > 65 = 40% of EGS admissions 

- In-hospital mortality for EGS in older adults is approximately 7-12% and the one-year mortality is around 30-38%.

- High risk due to decreased reserve, poor nutritional status, and chronic medical conditions 

- Frailty correlates with poor post-operative outcomes



Paper #1: Mehta A, Dultz LA, Joseph B, Canner JK, Stevens K, Jones C, Haut ER, Efron DT, Sakran JV. Emergency general surgery in geriatric patients: A statewide analysis of surgeon and hospital volume with outcomes. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2018 Jun;84(6):864-875. 


- retrospective population-based cross-sectional study using administrative data. 

- looks at the association between surgeon and hospital annual experience with outcomes in geriatric patients with EGS conditions.

- Note Table 2 provides outcomes broken down by type of surgery

- Key finding: patients operated on by a low-volume surgeon had about twice the odds of mortality, and 1.7X the odds of failure to rescue



Paper #2: Guttman MP, Tillmann BW, Nathens AB, Saskin R, Bronskill SE, Huang A, Haas B. Alive and at home: Five-year outcomes in older adults following emergency general surgery. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2021 Feb 1;90(2):287-295. 


- large-scale population-based retrospective cohort study looking at long-term outcomes of older adults with admissions for emergency general surgery diagnoses

- primary outcome of interest is “aging in place” or being able to reside in one’s home for as long as possible. 

- Key finding: being admitted for an EGS diagnosis reduces your survival and time in your home by about 7 months.

- Very little reduction in low-risk diagnoses (acute appendicitis/cholecystitis)

- 57% of patients were alive and in their home 5 years later



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