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Risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways based upon the Kawaguchi-Gayet complexity classification and impact on length of stay.

Publication ,  Conference
Kim, BJ; Arvide, EM; Gaskill, C; Martin, AN; Kawaguchi, Y; Chiang, Y-J; Dewhurst, WL; Phan, TL; Tran Cao, HS; Chun, YS; Katz, MHG; Vauthey, JN ...
Published in: Surg Open Sci
July 2022

BACKGROUND: The Kawaguchi-Gayet classification is a validated system to stratify open liver resections by complexity and postoperative complications. We hypothesized that Kawaguchi-Gayet classification could be used to create and implement risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways to reduce length of stay and variation in care. METHODS: Clinicopathologic data from hepatectomy patients (1/2017-6/2020) were abstracted from a prospective database. All open hepatectomies were assigned to groups based on 2 levels of Kawaguchi-Gayet classification, and corresponding risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways were created to decrease length of stay by 1 day compared to patients who were historically treated without a pathway: low-intermediate risk (open Kawaguchi-Gayet I/II) and high risk (open Kawaguchi-Gayet III). Outcomes were compared between periods before ("PRE"; 1/1/2017-9/30/2019) and after ("POST"; 10/1/2019-6/30/2020) implementation. RESULTS: Among 487 open hepatectomies (PRE: 374, POST: 113), 55.0% (n = 268) were low-intermediate risk and 45.0% (n = 219) were high risk. Major complications were similar PRE/POST: low-intermediate risk (PRE: 7.8%, POST: 9.4%, P = .681) and high risk (PRE: 18.9%, POST 10.0%, P = 0.139). Risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathway implementation reduced median length of stay for both low-intermediate risk (4 to 3.5 days, P = .009) and high risk (5 to 4 days, P = 0.022) patients. Risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways decreased length of stay variation, reflected in mean and standard deviation for all patients (PRE 5.5 ± 7.5 vs POST 4.4 ± 2.8 days). There was no difference in 90-day readmission rates between PRE (12.6%) and POST (8.8%) periods (P = .278). CONCLUSION: The creation and implementation of risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways reduced length of stay without increasing readmissions after hepatectomy. These generalizable risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways preoperatively stratify patients a priori into pathways for individualized preoperative discussions on realistic postoperative complications and length of stay expectations.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Surg Open Sci

DOI

EISSN

2589-8450

Publication Date

July 2022

Volume

9

Start / End Page

109 / 116

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
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MLA
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Kim, B. J., Arvide, E. M., Gaskill, C., Martin, A. N., Kawaguchi, Y., Chiang, Y.-J., … Newhook, T. E. (2022). Risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways based upon the Kawaguchi-Gayet complexity classification and impact on length of stay. Surg Open Sci, 9, 109–116. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sopen.2022.04.006
Kim, Bradford J., Elsa M. Arvide, Cameron Gaskill, Allison N. Martin, Yoshikuni Kawaguchi, Yi-Ju Chiang, Whitney L. Dewhurst, et al. “Risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways based upon the Kawaguchi-Gayet complexity classification and impact on length of stay.Surg Open Sci 9 (July 2022): 109–16. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sopen.2022.04.006.
Kim BJ, Arvide EM, Gaskill C, Martin AN, Kawaguchi Y, Chiang Y-J, et al. Risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways based upon the Kawaguchi-Gayet complexity classification and impact on length of stay. Surg Open Sci. 2022 Jul;9:109–16.
Kim, Bradford J., et al. “Risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways based upon the Kawaguchi-Gayet complexity classification and impact on length of stay.Surg Open Sci, vol. 9, July 2022, pp. 109–16. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.sopen.2022.04.006.
Kim BJ, Arvide EM, Gaskill C, Martin AN, Kawaguchi Y, Chiang Y-J, Dewhurst WL, Phan TL, Tran Cao HS, Chun YS, Katz MHG, Vauthey JN, Tzeng C-WD, Newhook TE. Risk-stratified posthepatectomy pathways based upon the Kawaguchi-Gayet complexity classification and impact on length of stay. Surg Open Sci. 2022 Jul;9:109–116.
Journal cover image

Published In

Surg Open Sci

DOI

EISSN

2589-8450

Publication Date

July 2022

Volume

9

Start / End Page

109 / 116

Location

United States