How the elderly fare after brain tumor surgery compared to younger patients within a 30-day follow-up: A National surgical Quality Improvement Program analysis of 30,183 cases

•A comprehensive analysis of perioperative risk factors and predictors of negative outcomes following craniotomy.•Age is an independent risk factor for minor and major adverse events as well as extended hospitalization.•Younger cohort tends to have longer operative times as well as more frequent sup...

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Published inJournal of clinical neuroscience Vol. 78; pp. 114 - 120
Main Authors Nia, Anna M., Branch, Daniel W., Maynard, Ken, Frank, Thomas, Yowtak-Guillet, June, Patterson, Joel T., Lall, Rishi R.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.08.2020
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Summary:•A comprehensive analysis of perioperative risk factors and predictors of negative outcomes following craniotomy.•Age is an independent risk factor for minor and major adverse events as well as extended hospitalization.•Younger cohort tends to have longer operative times as well as more frequent superficial and deep surgical site infections. The growing elderly population in Western societies has led to an increasing number of primary brain tumors occurring in patients beyond the age of 65. The purpose of this study was to assess and compare the safety, efficacy, and outcomes of oncological craniotomy procedures between patients above and below 65 years. We performed a retrospective analysis of the ACS-NSQIP database to identify patients undergoing supratentorial and infratentorial tumor excisions by neurosurgeons between 2008 and 2016. We stratified them based on a cutoff age of 65 years and analyzed for minor and major complications, reoperation, the total length of hospital stay, and mortality within a standardized 30-day follow-up. Among the 30,183 analyzed patients, 9,652 (32%) were elderly (age ≥ 65). The bivariate analysis demonstrated significantly increased risk of complications, including major and minor complications and mortality in patients with metabolic syndrome, preoperative steroid use, and ASA classification ≥3. (p-value ≤ 0.001***). After controlling for confounding variables in our logistic regression models, older age, metabolic syndrome, extended operative time beyond 5 h, dependent functional health status, ASA class ≥3, steroid use pre-operatively, and black/African American race were found to be significant predictors of major and minor complication. Our study provides a comprehensive analysis of perioperative risk factors and predictors of adverse outcomes following craniotomy for supratentorial and infratentorial tumors in elderly patients. We identified increased age as an independent risk factor for minor and major adverse events as well as extended hospitalization.
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ISSN:0967-5868
1532-2653
DOI:10.1016/j.jocn.2020.05.054