Department of Surgery, Graduate School of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan.
Department of Surgery, Graduate School of Biomedical and Health Sciences, Hiroshima University, Hiroshima, Japan; Clinical Research Support Committee, Japan Society for Surgical Infection, Tokyo, Japan.
Surgery. 2022 Dec;172(6):1768-1775. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2022.09.002. Epub 2022 Oct 25.
Postoperative infection after pancreatectomy in patients with pancreatic cancer often leads to poor prognosis. The aim of this study was to determine the prognostic effect of postoperative infection in patients with pancreatic cancer.
A multicenter cohort study was performed using a common database of patients with pancreatic cancer who underwent curative pancreatic resections between April 2013 and March 2015 at 15 high-volume centers in Japan. The rate of postoperative infection was determined, and patient demographic characteristics, clinicopathologic factors, and prognostic factors for overall survival were analyzed.
Of the 462 eligible patients who underwent curative pancreatectomy, postoperative infection occurred in 141 patients (31%), including 114 surgical site infections (25%), 50 remote infections (11%), and 23 combined infections (5%). Risk factors for postoperative infection included high body mass index, nondiabetes, and longer operation time. In the survival analysis, patients with postoperative infection had significantly worse overall survival than patients without postoperative infection. The median survival times were 21.9 and 33.0 months (P = .023), respectively, for patients with and without postoperative infection. According to the multivariate analysis for overall survival, lack of adjuvant therapy (P = .002), but not postoperative infection (P = .829), predicted poor prognosis. The multivariate analysis revealed that postoperative infection (P < .001) was an independent risk factor for lack of adjuvant therapy.
Postoperative infection in patients with pancreatic cancer may indirectly worsen the prognosis by preventing timely adjuvant therapy.
胰腺癌患者胰腺切除术后感染常导致预后不良。本研究旨在确定术后感染对胰腺癌患者的预后影响。
对 2013 年 4 月至 2015 年 3 月期间日本 15 家高容量中心接受根治性胰腺切除术的胰腺癌患者使用共同数据库进行多中心队列研究。确定术后感染率,并分析患者人口统计学特征、临床病理因素和总生存的预后因素。
462 例符合条件的接受根治性胰腺切除术的患者中,141 例(31%)发生术后感染,包括 114 例手术部位感染(25%)、50 例远处感染(11%)和 23 例混合感染(5%)。术后感染的危险因素包括高体重指数、非糖尿病和手术时间较长。在生存分析中,术后感染的患者总生存率明显低于无术后感染的患者。术后感染患者的中位生存时间分别为 21.9 个月和 33.0 个月(P=.023)。根据总生存的多变量分析,缺乏辅助治疗(P=.002),而不是术后感染(P=.829),预测预后不良。多变量分析显示,术后感染(P<.001)是缺乏辅助治疗的独立危险因素。
胰腺癌患者术后感染可能通过预防及时的辅助治疗间接恶化预后。