首页> 外文期刊>Canadian journal of anesthesia: Journal canadien d'anesthesie >A 25-year retrospective analysis of the American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status classification: did we “up-code” young obese patients when obesity was not yet considered a disease?
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A 25-year retrospective analysis of the American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status classification: did we “up-code” young obese patients when obesity was not yet considered a disease?

机译:对美国麻醉学家的25年来潮分析物理状态分类:我们是否“up-code”年轻的肥胖患者,肥胖尚未被视为疾病?

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Purpose The influence of obesity on anesthetic risk remains controversial, and obesity has only recently been specifically identified as a criterion by which a patient can be given a higher American Society of Anesthesiologists-physical status (ASA-PS) score. Nevertheless, we hypothesized that clinicians had assigned obese patients a greater ASA-PS score before obesity became an “official” criterion in 2015. Methods Basic demographic and physical details were collected on patients receiving anesthetics in the Virginia Commonwealth University Health System between 1986 and 2010. The risk ratio (RR) of “up-coding” ASA-PS classification assignments was calculated for patients of varying body mass index (BMI). We specifically focused on the subset of patients aged 20-29 yr in whom the medical sequelae of obesity would not yet likely be manifest. Results Among a total of 194,698 patients, the percentage who were obese increased from 20% to 39% between 1986 and 2010. Obese patients of all ages were more likely than non-obese patients to be classified as ASA-PS II-IV rather than ASA-PS I. The RR and ratio of RR analyses indicated a consistent pattern of up-coding patients with greater BMI (contingency table Chi-square: P < 0.001). Most notably, relative to patients with a normal BMI, young obese patients aged 20-29 yr had an increased likelihood of up-coding in ASA-PS compared with obese patients in the older cohorts. Conclusions These findings suggest a consistent and temporally stable practice of up-coding obese patients despite this lack of explicit guidance. The ASA House of Delegates’ recent decision to specifically mention obesity reinforces long-existing practices regarding ASA-PS coding and will likely not degrade the validity of data sets collected before the change.
机译:目的,肥胖对麻醉风险的影响仍然存在争议,肥胖仅被专门被确定为患者可以获得更高的美国麻醉学家 - 物理状态(ASA-PS)评分的标准。尽管如此,我们假设临床医生在肥胖之前将肥胖患者分配了更大的ASA-PS分数在2015年成为“官方”标准。方法对1986年至2010年间的弗吉尼亚英联邦大学卫生系统的麻醉患者收集了基本人口和物理细节。为不同体重指数(BMI)的患者计算了“上编码”ASA-PS分类任务的风险比(RR)。我们专注于20-29岁患者的患者的子集,肥胖的医疗后遗症尚未表现出来。结果共有194,698名患者,肥胖的百分比从1986年至2010年之间增加到39%。所有年龄龄的肥胖患者比非肥胖患者归类为ASA-PS II-IV而不是ASA-PS I.RR分析的RR和比率表明了较大BMI的升高患者的一致模式(应急表Chi-Spare:P <0.001)。最值得注意的是,相对于患有正常BMI的患者,20-29岁的年轻肥胖患者与年龄较旧群组中的肥胖患者相比,ASA-PS的升高编码可能性增加。结论这些研究结果表明,尽管缺乏明确的指导,但仍然存在符合上编码肥胖患者的一致和时间稳定的做法。代表们最近决定特别提及肥胖的决定加强了关于ASA-PS编码的长期实践,并且可能不会降低变更前收集的数据集的有效性。

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