Spota Andrea, Cioffi Stefano Piero Bernardo, Altomare Michele, Kurihara Hayato, Al-Sukhni Eisar, Kaplan Lewis J, Bass Gary Alan
Acute Care Surgery Research Fellow, UHN Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada.
General Surgery Trauma Team, Niguarda Hospital, Milan, Italy.
Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg. 2025 Jan 24;51(1):46. doi: 10.1007/s00068-024-02714-5.
Our study explores the utilization of objective tools for preoperative assessment of elderly patients by Emergency General Surgeons (EGS).
A descriptive cross-sectional survey was conducted via the European Society for Trauma and Emergency Surgery (ESTES) Research Committee. EGS were invited through the ESTES members' mailing list and social media platforms. The survey included two sections: (1) clinical scenarios involving elderly patients with varying chronic conditions, and (2) participant characteristics. Data collection lasted 12 weeks, with reminders sent every 4 weeks. Statistical analyses were performed using Microsoft Excel and EasyMedStat.
One hundred and seven surgeons responded to the survey. Median respondent age was 41 years, with a male prevalence (72.9%). Most participants were from Europe (85%). Key-findings included that 62.6% reported using one or more risk assessment tools (RATs), while 35.5% used one or more frailty scores. Additionally, 4.7% were unaware of any RATs, and 35.5% were unaware of any frailty scores. Decision-making strategies leveraging personal experience with minimal impact from RATs predominated.
Preoperative risk assessment tool and frailty score use for elderly patients requiring emergency surgery remains limited among ESTES surgeons. Our study highlights the need for focused education and tool workflow integration to improve risk stratification, decision-making and outcomes. Institutional approaches coupled with targeted educational interventions using implementation science principles are recommended to bridge this knowledge-to-action gap. Future research should focus on developing comprehensive, user-friendly tools and evaluating their impact on patient-centered outcomes.
我们的研究探讨了急诊普通外科医生(EGS)使用客观工具对老年患者进行术前评估的情况。
通过欧洲创伤与急诊外科学会(ESTES)研究委员会开展了一项描述性横断面调查。通过ESTES成员邮件列表和社交媒体平台邀请EGS参与。该调查包括两个部分:(1)涉及患有不同慢性病的老年患者的临床场景,以及(2)参与者特征。数据收集持续了12周,每4周发送一次提醒。使用Microsoft Excel和EasyMedStat进行统计分析。
107名外科医生回复了调查。受访者的中位年龄为41岁,男性占比(72.9%)。大多数参与者来自欧洲(85%)。主要发现包括,62.6%的人报告使用了一种或多种风险评估工具(RAT),而35.5%的人使用了一种或多种衰弱评分。此外,4.7%的人不知道任何RAT,35.5%的人不知道任何衰弱评分。以个人经验为主导、受RAT影响最小的决策策略占主导地位。
在ESTES外科医生中,用于需要急诊手术的老年患者的术前风险评估工具和衰弱评分的使用仍然有限。我们的研究强调了进行针对性教育和整合工具工作流程以改善风险分层、决策制定和结果的必要性。建议采用机构方法并结合使用实施科学原则的针对性教育干预措施来弥合这一知识到行动的差距。未来的研究应专注于开发全面、用户友好的工具,并评估它们对以患者为中心的结果的影响。