Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4307184 Surgery 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundManagement strategies for prolonged postoperative ileus (PPOI) are principally conservative and it is therefore valuable to shift attention to prevention. This study aimed to identify prospectively the perioperative risk factors for the development of PPOI and create a tool to predict its occurrence.MethodsPatients undergoing elective colorectal surgery at Auckland District Health Board between September 2012 and June 2014 were enrolled. In total, 92 variables were investigated prospectively with uniform application of a standardized definition of PPOI. Logistic regression and area under receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC) were used to generate risk stratification models.ResultsPPOI occurred in 88 of 327 patients (26.9%). Independent predictors of PPOI were male gender (odds ratio [OR], 3.01), decreasing preoperative albumin (OR, 1.11 per g/L unit), open or converted technique (OR, 6.37 [vs laparoscopic]), increasing wound size (OR, 1.09 [per cm]), operative difficulty (OR, 1.28 [per unit on 10-point Likert scale]), operative bowel handling (OR, 1.38 [per unit on 10-point Likert scale]), red cell transfusion (OR, 1.84 [per unit]), intravenous crystalloid administration (OR, 1.55 [per liter]), and delayed first mobilization (OR, 1.39 [per day]). The I-Score assimilated preoperative and intraoperative variables to generate a score out of 6 with a 7-fold increase in risk from low-risk to high-risk strata and fair predictive capacity (AUC, 0.742; 95% CI, 0.684–0.799).ConclusionIndependent predictors for the development of PPOI have been identified prospectively and used to construct a novel risk stratification model.

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