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Surgical resection for patients with pulmonary aspergillosis in the national inpatient sample
Authors:Deven C. Patel  Prasha Bhandari  David J. Epstein  Douglas Z. Liou  Leah M. Backhus  Mark F. Berry  Joseph B. Shrager  Natalie S. Lui
Affiliation:1.Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA, USA;2.Department of Medicine/Infectious Diseases, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA, USA;3.VA Palo Alto Health System, Palo Alto, CA, USA
Abstract:BackgroundThe role of lung resection in patients with pulmonary aspergillosis is generally reserved for those with localized disease who fail medical management. We used a national database to investigate the influence of preoperative patient comorbidities on inpatient mortality and need for surgery.MethodsPatients admitted with pulmonary aspergillosis between 2007 to 2015 were identified in the National Inpatient Sample dataset. Inpatient mortality rates were compared between patients treated medically and surgically. Predictors of mortality, surgical intervention, and non-elective admission were evaluated using multivariable logistic regression.ResultsAmong a population estimate of 112,998 patients with pulmonary aspergillosis, 107,606 (95.2%) underwent medical management alone and 5,392 (4.8%) underwent surgical resection. Positive predictors for surgery included hemoptysis, and history of lung cancer or chronic pulmonary diseases. Surgically treated patients had a lower inpatient mortality when compared to those treated medically (11.5% vs. 15.1%, P<0.001) in univariate analysis, but this finding did not persist in multivariable analysis (AOR 0.97, P=0.509). The odds of mortality were lower in patients undergoing video assisted thoracoscopic surgery compared to an open approach (AOR 0.77, P=0.001). Among patients treated surgically, mortality was higher in those with a history of lung cancer, solid organ transplantation, liver disease, human immunodeficiency virus infection, hematologic diseases, chronic pulmonary diseases, and those admitted non-electively requiring surgery.ConclusionsIn this generalizable study, medical and surgical management of pulmonary aspergillosis were comparable in terms of inpatient mortality. However, non-elective admission and patients with select comorbidities have significantly worse outcomes after surgical intervention.
Keywords:Pulmonary aspergillosis   surgery   mortality   risk factors   non-elective admission
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