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Observational Study
. 2024 Apr 13;403(10435):1482-1492.
doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(24)00103-X. Epub 2024 Mar 22.

Outcomes after surgery for children in Africa (ASOS-Paeds): a 14-day prospective observational cohort study

Collaborators
Observational Study

Outcomes after surgery for children in Africa (ASOS-Paeds): a 14-day prospective observational cohort study

ASOS-Paeds Investigators. Lancet. .

Abstract

Background: Safe anaesthesia and surgery are a public health imperative. There are few data describing outcomes for children undergoing anaesthesia and surgery in Africa. We aimed to get robust epidemiological data to describe patient care and outcomes for children undergoing anaesthesia and surgery in hospitals in Africa.

Methods: This study was a 14-day, international, prospective, observational cohort study of children (aged <18 years) undergoing surgery in Africa. We recruited as many hospitals as possible across all levels of care (first, second, and third) providing surgical treatment. Each hospital recruited all eligible children for a 14-day period commencing on the date chosen by each participating hospital within the study recruitment period from Jan 15 to Dec 23, 2022. Data were collected prospectively for consecutive patients on paper case record forms. The primary outcome was in-hospital postoperative complications within 30 days of surgery and the secondary outcome was in-hospital mortality within 30 days after surgery. We also collected hospital-level data describing equipment, facilities, and protocols available. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05061407.

Findings: We recruited 8625 children from 249 hospitals in 31 African countries. The mean age was 6·1 (SD 4·9) years, with 5675 (66·0%) of 8600 children being male. Most children (6110 [71·2%] of 8579 patients) were from category 1 of the American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status score undergoing elective surgery (5325 [61·9%] of 8604 patients). Postoperative complications occurred in 1532 (18·0%) of 8515 children, predominated by infections (971 [11·4%] of 8538 children). Deaths occurred in 199 (2·3%) of 8596 patients, 169 (84·9%) of 199 patients following emergency surgeries. Deaths following postoperative complications occurred in 166 (10·8%) of 1530 complications. Operating rooms were reported as safe for anaesthesia and surgery for neonates (121 [54·3%] of 223 hospitals), infants (147 [65·9%] of 223 hospitals), and children younger than 6 years (188 [84·3%] of 223 hospitals).

Interpretation: Outcomes following anaesthesia and surgery for children in Africa are poor, with complication rates up to four-fold higher (18% vs 4·4-14%) and mortality rates 11-fold higher than high-income countries in a crude, unadjusted comparison (23·15 deaths vs 2·18 deaths per 1000 children). To improve surgical outcomes for children in Africa, we need health system strengthening, provision of safe environments for anaesthesia and surgery, and strategies to address the high rate of failure to rescue.

Funding: Jan Pretorius Research Fund of the South African Society of Anaesthesiologists and Association of Anesthesiologists of Uganda.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests AT received a grant from the South African Society of Anaesthesiologists. This money was used to pay for ethical clearances in Democratic Republic of the Congo, Cameroon, Sierra Leone, Senegal, Burundi, and Kenya, and to pay for study administrator, Safe Surgery South Africa. AH-S and MTN received funding to pay for ethical clearance of the study in Uganda from the Association of Anesthesiologists of Uganda. RP received grants from Edwards Lifesciences and Intersurgical UK, and consulting fees and honoraria from Edwards Lifesciences. All other authors declare no competing interests. BMB, RP, AH-S, HK, AH, and FKB are all partially funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Global Health Group on Perioperative and Critical Care, NIHR133850.

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