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This is a single-centre retrospective cohort study utilising electronic hospital records.
The aim of this study is to improve care for all patients with an intestinal emergency, irrespective of whether they have surgery or not. Data will be derived from electronic patient records collected as part of routine clinical patient care on all general adult wards (excluding maternity) between 2013 and 2020. The investigators will then identify patients who had an emergency laparotomy, and those who had a laparoscopic procedure. The investigators aim to identify 2 further groups where treatment is non-surgical (but could be medical or interventional radiology) or where treatment is considered futile, suggesting that an early focus on end of life care might be appropriate. The primary objective is to provide mortality rates for different treatment options, and analysis of short- and long-term outcomes. The secondary endpoints are to define patient sub-groups with similar health characteristics based on clinical data and an established risk index and to use statistical analysis to predict the risk of death for each patient group and treatment option, which will allow the investigators to identify the best care pathways for each cluster.
Full description
Abdominal emergencies are common, involving perforation, obstruction or ischaemia of the bowel, often needing life-saving emergency surgery, with a large incision to access the abdominal cavity called "laparotomy". This procedure is high risk with 10% mortality rate. 30,000 emergency laparotomies are performed each year in England and Wales. Since 2013, the National Emergency Laparotomy Audit (NELA) has set standards of care and monitored outcomes for emergency laparotomy, which has reduced mortality from 11.8 to 9.5%. However, patients who do NOT have a laparotomy are not well characterised and do not receive the prioritised care patients having surgery do, even though their condition is no less severe. Initial research has shown a surprisingly large group of patients (32%) with an intestinal emergency do not have surgery and have 30-day mortality of 63%. There are three additional groups of patients admitted with abdominal emergencies: patients having keyhole surgery or interventional radiological procedures, and patients for whom any treatment would be futile and would benefit most from an end of life care pathway. Clearly further work is needed to investigate the management of ALL patients with intestinal emergency, to optimise care for each group of patients.The aim of this study is to improve care for all patients with an intestinal emergency, irrespective of whether they have surgery or not.
AIM:
This is a single-centre retrospective cohort study utilising electronic hospital records.
STUDY DESIGN:
Data will be derived from electronic patient records collected as part of routine clinical patient care on all general adult wards (excluding maternity) between 2013 and 2020.
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria:
The investigators have estimated that we will have about 2,500 patients who fulfil the inclusion criteria in this period. Patient outcomes will be analysed from up to one year following their admission for acute abdomen.
PRIMARY OBJECTIVE:
To provide mortality rates for different treatment options, and analysis of short- and long-term outcomes.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVE:
To define patient sub-groups with similar health characteristics based on clinical data and an established risk index, and to use statistical analysis to predict the risk of death for each patient group and treatment option, which will allow us to identify the best care pathways for each cluster.
PRIMARY ENDPOINT:
The mortality risk for each treatment group
SECONDARY ENDPOINT:
The risk of other outcomes and long-term complications and association between patient factors and these outcomes
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Inclusion criteria
All acute general surgical adult patients admitted between 2013 and 2020 with all of the conditions below:
Exclusion criteria
2,500 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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