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Brief Title: Gastrointestinal Emergency Surgery: Evaluation of Morbidity and Mortality
Official Title: Mortality and Morbidity in Emergency Gastrointestinal Surgery: Comparison of Different Incidence of Interventions According to the ICD-9-CM Classification in Relation to the Age Groups
Study ID: NCT05226221
Brief Summary: Gastrointestinal Emergency Surgery: Evaluation of Morbidity and Mortality
Detailed Description: Background: Gastrointestinal emergencies (GE) are frequently encountered in the emergency department (ED), and patients can present with wide-ranging symptoms. Symptoms that suggest an underlying GE can include: abdominal pain; nausea; vomiting; diarrhoea; melaena; haematemesis; constipation; jaundice; and abdominal distension. Abdominal pain is a common ED presentation and can be the cause of a wide variety of GE. The acute abdomen (AB) is a term given to sudden severe pain in the abdomen requiring fast diagnosis and treatment usually requiring emergency surgical procedures. Causes of AB may include: appendicitis; pancreatitis; peptic ulcer disease (PUD); gall bladder pathology; intestinal ischemia; diverticulitis; intestinal obstruction; and ruptured ectopic pregnancy. Emergency gastrointestinal surgery (EGS) is burdened by significant mortality and morbidity rates because it is performed with little to no advance planning or preparation, on patients who are in dire straits. Scott JW et al report that there are more than 3 million patients admitted to US hospitals each year for EGS diagnoses, more than the sum of all new cancer diagnoses. (Scotte JW) In addition to the complexity of the urgent surgical patient (often suffering from multiple co-morbidities), there is the unpredictability and the severity of the event. Frequently, it is necessary rapid decision-making that allows a correct diagnosis and an adequate and timely treatment. (See Ref.) Moreover, another study by Havens JM et al reported that patients undergoing EGS operation are up to 8 times more likely to die postoperatively than are patients undergoing the same procedures electively. Furthermore, the increase in average life will lead more and more people over 65 to face surgical pathologies in an emergency setting, and in the elderly EGS is characterized by greater morbidity and mortality as well as by a global worsening of the residual quality of life (QoL). The explanation for the high percentage of acute complications could be found in the inevitable reduction of the functional reserve related to age. An example is the reduction of the body's immune defenses in the humoral response of B cells, in the cell-mediated immune function and macrophage activity which explains the susceptibility to infectious complications, facilitated by the altered integrity of the skin barrier and mucous membranes too. Is in this setting that tools capable to help the surgeon in the decision-making process in order to reduce mortality and morbidity linked to the EGS could become very useful. To do this, it is necessary to study the greatest number of risk factors associated with EGS, considering all age groups and all types of diseases. AIM: To analyze the clinicopathological findings, management strategies, and short-term outcomes of gastrointestinal emergency procedures; to evaluate the prognostic role of existing risk-scores; to define the most suitable scoring system or gastro-intestinal surgical emergency; to identify any specific parameters that may be used as variables for a new scoring system, peri-operative variables predicting adverse results and any critical issues in the management of these patients. STUDY DESIGN: both retrospective and prospective cohort, multicenter, observational, no profit clinical study. All the study participants will collect data on \> 18 y. o. patients underwent general emergency surgery during an 18 month period, guaranteeing whole completeness of the picked data \> 95%. This study was approved by the Health Sciences Research Ethics Board of the University Campus Biomedio of Rome
Minimum Age: 18 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Università Campus Biomedico, Rome, Lazio, Italy