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Aortic root surgery with circulatory arrest: Predictors of prolonged postoperative hospital stay
Authors:Ourania Preventza  Joseph S. Coselli  Andrea Garcia  Shahab Akvan  Sarang Kashyap  Katherine H. Simpson  Matt D. Price  Kim I. de la Cruz  Konstantinos Spiliotopoulos  Lorraine D. Cornwell  Faisal G. Bakaeen  Shuab Omer  Denton A. Cooley
Affiliation:1. Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Michael E. DeBakey Department of Surgery, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Tex;2. Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Texas Heart Institute, Houston, Tex;3. Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Houston, Tex
Abstract:

Objective

Little is known about the outcomes of aortic root operations that involve inducing hypothermic circulatory arrest for relatively extensive proximal aortic surgery. We attempted to identify predictors of postoperative hospital length of stay (LOS) and factors that affect postoperative recovery.

Methods

During 2006-2014, 247 of 265 patients (93.2%) with disease extending into the aortic arch survived aortic root operations (206 elective, 41 urgent/emergent) in which hypothermic circulatory arrest with moderate hypothermia was used. Stepwise multivariate regression analysis was performed to identify predictors of LOS (as a continuous variable) and prolonged LOS (defined as LOS >9 days, the median for the cohort). By this definition, 111 patients (45%) had prolonged LOS and 136 (55%) did not.

Results

Preoperative factors that independently predicted longer LOS in the entire cohort included age (P = .0014), redo sternotomy (P = .0047), and intraoperative packed red blood cell (PRBC) transfusion (P = .0007). Redo sternotomy and intraoperative PRBC transfusion also predicted longer LOS in 3 subgroup analyses: one of elective cases, one from which total arch replacement procedures were excluded, and one limited to patients who were discharged home. Age predicted longer LOS in the non-total arch (hemiarch) replacement patients. Ventilator support >48 hours (P < .0001) was associated with longer LOS. Elective aortic valve?sparing root replacement predicted a shorter LOS than valve replacement in multivariate regression analysis (P = .028).

Conclusions

In patients undergoing aortic root surgery with hypothermic circulatory arrest for disease extending into the aortic arch, reducing intraoperative PRBC transfusion except when absolutely necessary may reduce postoperative LOS and expedite recovery. Performing aortic valve–sparing root replacement, when feasible, may also reduce LOS.
Keywords:postoperative hospital stay  circulatory arrest, aortic root surgery  intraoperative packed red blood cell transfusion  and aortic valve-sparing root replacement  ACP  antegrade cerebral perfusion  AVSRR  aortic valve–sparing root replacement  CPB  cardiopulmonary bypass  LOS  length of stay  PRBC  packed red blood cells  TAR  total arch replacement
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