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National prospective cohort study of the burden of acute small bowel obstruction

National prospective cohort study of the burden of acute small bowel obstruction
National prospective cohort study of the burden of acute small bowel obstruction

Background: small bowel obstruction is a common surgical emergency, and is associated with high levels of morbidity and mortality across the world. The literature provides little information on the conservatively managed group. The aim of this study was to describe the burden of small bowel obstruction in the UK.

Methods: this prospective cohort study was conducted in 131 acute hospitals in the UK between January and April 2017, delivered by trainee research collaboratives. Adult patients with a diagnosis of mechanical small bowel obstruction were included. The primary outcome was in-hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included complications, unplanned intensive care admission and readmission within 30 days of discharge. Practice measures, including use of radiological investigations, water soluble contrast, operative and nutritional interventions, were collected.

Results: of 2341 patients identified, 693 (29·6 per cent) underwent immediate surgery (within 24 h of admission), 500 (21·4 per cent) had delayed surgery after initial conservative management, and 1148 (49·0 per cent) were managed non-operatively. The mortality rate was 6·6 per cent (6·4 per cent for non-operative management, 6·8 per cent for immediate surgery, 6·8 per cent for delayed surgery; P = 0·911). The major complication rate was 14·4 per cent overall, affecting 19·0 per cent in the immediate surgery, 23·6 per cent in the delayed surgery and 7·7 per cent in the non-operative management groups (P < 0·001). Cox regression found hernia or malignant aetiology and malnutrition to be associated with higher rates of death. Malignant aetiology, operative intervention, acute kidney injury and malnutrition were associated with increased risk of major complication.

Conclusion: small bowel obstruction represents a significant healthcare burden. Patient-level factors such as timing of surgery, acute kidney injury and nutritional status are factors that might be modified to improve outcomes.

Acute Disease, Acute Kidney Injury/epidemiology, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Conservative Treatment/standards, Cost of Illness, Female, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Intensive Care Units/statistics & numerical data, Intestinal Obstruction/diagnosis, Intestine, Small/pathology, Male, Malnutrition/mortality, Middle Aged, Morbidity, Mortality/trends, Patient Readmission/statistics & numerical data, Postoperative Complications/epidemiology, Prospective Studies, Time Factors, United Kingdom/epidemiology
2474-9842
354-366
Lee, M.J.
342f0f88-561f-4667-90c1-567f2abe8b68
Sayers, A.E.
6ef8efeb-3fb4-4945-b46a-050acce78033
Drake, T.M.
059a4d12-8b2d-449a-87d6-f59e00786557
Marriott, P.J.
12d40d22-dd28-4209-a735-8dab16119e4e
Anderson, I.D.
692f49a6-ff3f-41d9-903a-2b22d39aca9a
Bach, S.P.
06750a10-bd93-47df-9451-608960af30df
Bradburn, M.
1de9ef82-6406-4dcb-aa5a-037c5fca3898
Hind, D.
11cd7da4-ba5b-4fd6-a59e-fb4326601f48
Verjee, A.
efd93989-8f72-4e98-adab-406847647fa7
Fearnhead, N.S.
39468f9f-bb98-4c77-ae75-315bdbad27f7
Hamady, Zaed Z.R.
545a1c81-276e-4341-a420-aa10aa5d8ca8
NASBO Steering Group and NASBO Collaborators
Lee, M.J.
342f0f88-561f-4667-90c1-567f2abe8b68
Sayers, A.E.
6ef8efeb-3fb4-4945-b46a-050acce78033
Drake, T.M.
059a4d12-8b2d-449a-87d6-f59e00786557
Marriott, P.J.
12d40d22-dd28-4209-a735-8dab16119e4e
Anderson, I.D.
692f49a6-ff3f-41d9-903a-2b22d39aca9a
Bach, S.P.
06750a10-bd93-47df-9451-608960af30df
Bradburn, M.
1de9ef82-6406-4dcb-aa5a-037c5fca3898
Hind, D.
11cd7da4-ba5b-4fd6-a59e-fb4326601f48
Verjee, A.
efd93989-8f72-4e98-adab-406847647fa7
Fearnhead, N.S.
39468f9f-bb98-4c77-ae75-315bdbad27f7
Hamady, Zaed Z.R.
545a1c81-276e-4341-a420-aa10aa5d8ca8

Lee, M.J., Sayers, A.E., Drake, T.M., Marriott, P.J., Anderson, I.D., Bach, S.P., Bradburn, M., Hind, D., Verjee, A. and Fearnhead, N.S. , NASBO Steering Group and NASBO Collaborators (2019) National prospective cohort study of the burden of acute small bowel obstruction. BJS Open, 3 (3), 354-366. (doi:10.1002/bjs5.50136).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: small bowel obstruction is a common surgical emergency, and is associated with high levels of morbidity and mortality across the world. The literature provides little information on the conservatively managed group. The aim of this study was to describe the burden of small bowel obstruction in the UK.

Methods: this prospective cohort study was conducted in 131 acute hospitals in the UK between January and April 2017, delivered by trainee research collaboratives. Adult patients with a diagnosis of mechanical small bowel obstruction were included. The primary outcome was in-hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included complications, unplanned intensive care admission and readmission within 30 days of discharge. Practice measures, including use of radiological investigations, water soluble contrast, operative and nutritional interventions, were collected.

Results: of 2341 patients identified, 693 (29·6 per cent) underwent immediate surgery (within 24 h of admission), 500 (21·4 per cent) had delayed surgery after initial conservative management, and 1148 (49·0 per cent) were managed non-operatively. The mortality rate was 6·6 per cent (6·4 per cent for non-operative management, 6·8 per cent for immediate surgery, 6·8 per cent for delayed surgery; P = 0·911). The major complication rate was 14·4 per cent overall, affecting 19·0 per cent in the immediate surgery, 23·6 per cent in the delayed surgery and 7·7 per cent in the non-operative management groups (P < 0·001). Cox regression found hernia or malignant aetiology and malnutrition to be associated with higher rates of death. Malignant aetiology, operative intervention, acute kidney injury and malnutrition were associated with increased risk of major complication.

Conclusion: small bowel obstruction represents a significant healthcare burden. Patient-level factors such as timing of surgery, acute kidney injury and nutritional status are factors that might be modified to improve outcomes.

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Accepted/In Press date: 27 November 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 February 2019
Published date: June 2019
Keywords: Acute Disease, Acute Kidney Injury/epidemiology, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Conservative Treatment/standards, Cost of Illness, Female, Hospital Mortality, Humans, Intensive Care Units/statistics & numerical data, Intestinal Obstruction/diagnosis, Intestine, Small/pathology, Male, Malnutrition/mortality, Middle Aged, Morbidity, Mortality/trends, Patient Readmission/statistics & numerical data, Postoperative Complications/epidemiology, Prospective Studies, Time Factors, United Kingdom/epidemiology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485410
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485410
ISSN: 2474-9842
PURE UUID: 3ddd34d7-5939-488e-bfec-970b077a51e7
ORCID for Zaed Z.R. Hamady: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4591-5226

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Date deposited: 06 Dec 2023 17:33
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:05

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Contributors

Author: M.J. Lee
Author: A.E. Sayers
Author: T.M. Drake
Author: P.J. Marriott
Author: I.D. Anderson
Author: S.P. Bach
Author: M. Bradburn
Author: D. Hind
Author: A. Verjee
Author: N.S. Fearnhead
Author: Zaed Z.R. Hamady ORCID iD
Corporate Author: NASBO Steering Group and NASBO Collaborators

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