[Intensive care unit admissions following lobectomy or sublobar resections for non-small cell lung cancer]
- PMID: 22647404
- DOI: 10.17992/lbl.2012.05.431
[Intensive care unit admissions following lobectomy or sublobar resections for non-small cell lung cancer]
Abstract
Introduction: Following resection for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), patients are usually admitted to the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU)for a few hours before admission to a general ward (GW). However, some patients need ICU-admission, either immediately post-surgery or from the PACU or GW. The aim of this study was to investigate the indications and risk factors for ICU-admission.
Material and methods: A retrospective study of 252 patients who underwent lobectomy, wedge resection or segmentectomy for NSCLC in Iceland during 2001-2010. Data was retrieved from medical records and patients admitted to the ICU compared to patients not admitted.
Results: Altogether 21 patients (8%) were admitted to the ICU, median length-of-stay being one day (range 1-68). In 11 cases (52%) the reasons for admission were intraoperative problems, usually hypotension or excessive bleeding. Ten patients were admitted from the GW (n=4) or PACU (n=6), due to hypotension (n=4), heart and/or respiratory failure (n=4) and reoperation for bleeding (n=2). There were three ICU-readmissions. Patients admitted to the ICU were six years older (p=0.004) and more often had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and/or coronary artery disease. Tumor size, pTNM-stage, length of operation and the ratio of patients receiving TEA (thoracic epidural anaesthesia) were similar between groups. Over two-thirds of the ICU-patients had minor complications and around half had major complications, compared to 30% and 4%, respectively, for controls.
Conclusion: ICU-admissions are infrequent following non-pneumonectomy lung resections for NSCLC, these patients being older with cardiopulmonary comorbidities. In half of the cases, admission to the ICU directly follows surgery and ICU-readmissions are few.
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