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Hospital Readmission Following Surgery for Gastric Cancer: Frequency, Timing, Etiologies, and Survival
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Hospital Readmission Following Surgery for Gastric Cancer: Frequency, Timing, Etiologies, and Survival JOURNAL OF GASTROINTESTINAL SURGERY Merchant, S. J., Ituarte, P. G., Choi, A., Sun, V., Chao, J., Lee, B., Kim, J. 2015; 19 (10): 1769–81Abstract
Readmission rates after cancer surgery are infrequently reported, and better understanding of the etiologies for readmission is necessary. We sought to investigate the frequency, timing, and etiologies for hospital readmission after surgery for gastric cancer and whether readmission correlates with clinical outcomes.Hospital readmission was examined through linkage of the California Cancer Registry with the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development database. Patients with gastric adenocarcinoma who had undergone curative intent surgery between 2000 and 2011 were identified. First readmission within 90 days of initial surgery was analyzed with respect to timing (0-30, 31-60, and 61-90 days) and etiology for readmission. Variables associated with readmission and impact on 5-year overall survival (OS) were examined.A total of 8887 (male, n?=?5326; female, n?=?3561) patients underwent curative intent surgery for gastric adenocarcinoma. Within 90 days of initial surgery, 2559 (28.8 %) patients had inpatient hospital readmission. The majority of readmissions occurred in the first 30 days [0-30, n?=?1371 (53.6 %); 31-60, n?=?773 (30.2 %); and 61-90, n?=?415 (16.2 %)]. Readmission vs. no readmission within 90 days correlated with worse 5-year OS in patients with local (51.2 vs. 70.9 %, p?
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