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A systematic review and consensus definitions for standardised end-points in perioperative medicine: pulmonary complications

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Version 2 2024-06-04, 08:19
Version 1 2018-06-12, 12:29
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 08:19 authored by TEF Abbott, AJ Fowler, P Pelosi, M Gama de Abreu, AM Møller, J Canet, B Creagh-Brown, M Mythen, T Gin, MM Lalu, E Futier, MP Grocott, MJ Schultz, RM Pearse, P Myles, TJ Gan, A Kurz, P Peyton, D Sessler, M Tramèr, A Cyna, GS De Oliveira, C Wu, M Jensen, H Kehlet, Mari BottiMari Botti, O Boney, G Haller, M Grocott, T Cook, L Fleisher, M Neuman, D Story, R Gruen, S Bampoe, L Evered, D Scott, B Silbert, D van Dijk, C Kalkman, M Chan, H Grocott, R Eckenhoff, L Rasmussen, L Eriksson, S Beattie, D Wijeysundera, G Landoni, K Leslie, B Biccard, S Howell, P Nagele, T Richards, A Lamy, M Gabreu, A Klein, T Corcoran, D Jamie Cooper, S Dieleman, E Diouf, D McIlroy, R Bellomo, A Shaw, J Prowle, K Karkouti, J Billings, D Mazer, M Jayarajah, M Murphy, J Bartoszko, R Sneyd, S Morris, R George, R Moonesinghe, M Shulman, M Lane-Fall, U Nilsson, N Stevenson, W van Klei, L Cabrini, T Miller, N Pace, S Jackson, D Buggy, T Short, B Riedel, V Gottumukkala, B Alkhaffaf, M Johnson
Background: There is a need for robust, clearly defined, patient-relevant outcome measures for use in randomised trials in perioperative medicine. Our objective was to establish standard outcome measures for postoperative pulmonary complications research. Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted using MEDLINE, Web of Science, SciELO, and the Korean Journal Database. Definitions were extracted from included manuscripts. We then conducted a three-stage Delphi consensus process to select the optimal outcome measures in terms of methodological quality and overall suitability for perioperative trials. Results: From 2358 records, the full texts of 81 manuscripts were retrieved, of which 45 met the inclusion criteria. We identified three main categories of outcome measure specific to perioperative pulmonary outcomes: (i) composite outcome measures of multiple pulmonary outcomes (27 definitions); (ii) pneumonia (12 definitions); and (iii) respiratory failure (six definitions). These were rated by the group according to suitability for routine use. The majority of definitions were given a low score, and many were imprecise, difficult to apply consistently, or both, in large patient populations. A small number of highly rated definitions were identified as appropriate for widespread use. The group then recommended four outcome measures for future use, including one new definition. Conclusions: A large number of postoperative pulmonary outcome measures have been used, but most are poorly defined. Our four recommended outcome measures include a new definition of postoperative pulmonary complications, incorporating an assessment of severity. These definitions will meet the needs of most clinical effectiveness trials of treatments to improve postoperative pulmonary outcomes.

History

Journal

British journal of anaesthesia

Volume

120

Pagination

1066-1079

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0007-0912

eISSN

1471-6771

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, British Journal of Anaesthesia

Issue

5

Publisher

Elsevier

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