The Society of Thoracic Surgeons 2018 Adult Cardiac Surgery Risk Models: Part 1 - Background, Design Considerations, and Model Development.

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Citation: Annals of Thoracic Surgery. 105(5):1411-1418, 2018 05.PMID: 29577925Institution: MedStar Heart & Vascular InstituteForm of publication: Journal ArticleMedline article type(s): Journal ArticleSubject headings: *Cardiac Surgical Procedures/ae [Adverse Effects] | *Models, Statistical | *Postoperative Complications/et [Etiology] | *Risk Assessment | Adult | Databases, Factual | Humans | Societies, Medical | Thoracic SurgeryYear: 2018Local holdings: Available online from MWHC library: 1995 - present, Available in print through MWHC library:1999-2007ISSN:
  • 0003-4975
Name of journal: The Annals of thoracic surgeryAbstract: BACKGROUND: The last published version of the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) Adult Cardiac Surgery Database (ACSD) risk models were developed in 2008 based on patient data from 2002 to 2006 and have been periodically recalibrated. In response to evolving changes in patient characteristics, risk profiles, surgical practice, and outcomes, STS has now developed a set of entirely new risk models for adult cardiac surgery.CONCLUSIONS: Completely new STS ACSD risk models have been developed based on contemporary patient data; their performance is superior to that of previous STS ACSD models.Copyright (c) 2018. Published by Elsevier Inc.METHODS: New models were estimated for isolated coronary artery bypass grafting surgery (CABG, n = 439,092), isolated aortic or mitral valve surgery (n = 150,150), and combined valve + CABG (n = 81,588) procedures. The development set was based on July 2011 to June 2014 STS-ACSD data; validation was performed using July 2014 to December 2016 data. Separate models were developed for operative mortality, stroke, renal failure, prolonged ventilation, reoperation, composite major morbidity or mortality, and prolonged or short postoperative length of stay. Because of its low occurrence rate, a combined model incorporating all operative types was developed for deep sternal wound infection/mediastinitis (DSWI).RESULTS: Calibration was excellent except for the DSWI model, which slightly underestimated risk due to higher rates of this endpoint in the more recent validation data; this will be recalibrated in each feedback report. Discrimination (c-index) of all models was superior to that of 2008 models except for the stroke model for valve patients.All authors: Badhwar V, Cleveland JC Jr., D'Agostino RS, Desai ND, Edgerton JR, Feng L, Furnary AP, He X, Jacobs JP, Kurlansky PA, Lobdell KW, O'Brien SM, Rankin JS, Shahian DM, Thourani VH, Vassileva C, Wyler von Ballmoos MCFiscal year: FY2018Digital Object Identifier: Date added to catalog: 2018-04-20
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Journal Article MedStar Authors Catalog Article 29577925 Available 29577925

Available online from MWHC library: 1995 - present, Available in print through MWHC library:1999-2007

BACKGROUND: The last published version of the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) Adult Cardiac Surgery Database (ACSD) risk models were developed in 2008 based on patient data from 2002 to 2006 and have been periodically recalibrated. In response to evolving changes in patient characteristics, risk profiles, surgical practice, and outcomes, STS has now developed a set of entirely new risk models for adult cardiac surgery.

CONCLUSIONS: Completely new STS ACSD risk models have been developed based on contemporary patient data; their performance is superior to that of previous STS ACSD models.

Copyright (c) 2018. Published by Elsevier Inc.

METHODS: New models were estimated for isolated coronary artery bypass grafting surgery (CABG, n = 439,092), isolated aortic or mitral valve surgery (n = 150,150), and combined valve + CABG (n = 81,588) procedures. The development set was based on July 2011 to June 2014 STS-ACSD data; validation was performed using July 2014 to December 2016 data. Separate models were developed for operative mortality, stroke, renal failure, prolonged ventilation, reoperation, composite major morbidity or mortality, and prolonged or short postoperative length of stay. Because of its low occurrence rate, a combined model incorporating all operative types was developed for deep sternal wound infection/mediastinitis (DSWI).

RESULTS: Calibration was excellent except for the DSWI model, which slightly underestimated risk due to higher rates of this endpoint in the more recent validation data; this will be recalibrated in each feedback report. Discrimination (c-index) of all models was superior to that of 2008 models except for the stroke model for valve patients.

English

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