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ACUTE-Acute Surgical Care- Risk Factors and Outcomes for Patients in Need of Acute Surgical Care

ACUTE-Acute Surgical Care- Risk Factors and Outcomes for Patients in Need of Acute Surgical Care

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Observational retrospective study of patients in need of acute surgical care admitted to Skåne University Hospital between 2009 and 2019.

Description

At Skåne University Hospital approximately 6000 individuals are treated for acute abdominal diseases each year. Given the high number of patients, there is an urgent need to optimize acute surgical care. Lower complication rates would decrease hospital stay, health care costs as well as personal suffering.

Assessment instruments for risks and frailty are not validated for the acute setting and the investigators hypothesize there is room for improvement in prophylactic interventions and risk assessment. The investigators will study cohorts of patients with three different surgical diagnosis: acute pancreatitis, gastrointestinal bleeding and perforated ulcer aiming to identify risk factors for complications or death and to investigate assessment tools in this population. Using propensity score analysis, the investigators will try to identify treatment options associated with better outcome for subcohorts defined by frailty, comorbidity, age or gender. Specific factors of interest include: time to- and kind of treatment, handling of ongoing pharmacological therapy (anticoagulants, corticosteroids) and need for further treatments on a long time basis. The results from this project will be used in a future prospective study where prophylactic treatments and specific treatment options are studied.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria: Patients admitted to Skåne University hospital in need of acute

surgical care -

Exclusion Criteria: Below 18 years old

-

Study details
    Risk Factors
    Complication of Surgical Procedure
    Complication of Treatment
    Complication of Anesthesia
    Long Term Effects After Emergency Surgery
    Long Term Effects After GI Bleeding

NCT05195697

Region Skane

27 January 2024

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