Cryoablation in 350 Nuss procedures

Space: StayCurrentMD Playlist: Articles You Should Know About Author: Stay Current Published: 2023-10-18

Expert / Speaker

Stay Current
Emergency Medicine
0 Views
0 Likes
0 Shares
0 Comments

Topic overview

Another article you should know by Dr. Cecilia Gigena

"Cryoablation in 350 Nuss Procedures: Evolution of Hospital Length of Stay and Opioid Use"

Authors: Krista Lai, David M. Notrica, Lisa E. McMahon, Paul Kang, Mark S. Molitor, J. Craig Egan, Jae-O Bae, Zebediah M. Hunteman, Daniel J. Ostlie, Justin H. Lee, Benjamin E. Padilla

Full article: https://gcmd.co/3M28m8k

Introduction

Current studies show cryoablation decreases opioid requirements and lengths of stay (LOS) in patients undergoing the Nuss procedure for pectus excavatum. This study evaluated the relationship between cryoablation and clinical outcomes for the Nuss procedure.

Methods

A retrospective single-center chart review was performed on patients undergoing the Nuss procedure with intercostal cryoablation from December 2017-August 2021. Demographics, hospital course, and postoperative complications were abstracted. To evaluate the evolution of outcomes over time, the earliest quarter (Q1) of cryoablation patients was compared to the last quarter (Q4).

Results

Over 45 months, 350 Nuss procedures with cryoablation were performed. The mean age at operation was 15.7 ± 2.3 years with an average Haller Index of 5.4 ± 4.2. The mean operative time was 136 ± 40.5 minutes. On average, patients used 2.8 ± 2.5 OME/kg of opioid in hospital with a LOS of 2.7 ± 1.1 days. The Q4 patients were discharged 1.3 days earlier (p<0.05) than Q1 patients, with 80% of Q4 discharged by postoperative day #2 vs. 23% in Q1 (p<0.05). Q4 patients received 74% (p<0.05) less opioid in hospital and 21% (p<0.05) less on discharge. Within 90 days postoperatively, complication rates (chest tube placement, wound infection, readmission, neuropathic pain) were similar. Only two patients (0.6%) required reoperation for bar migration/slippage.

Conclusion

With increased experience, cryoablation for the Nuss procedure decreased opioid use by 74% and was associated with 80% of patients achieving early discharge. Major complication rates were not increased. Cryoablation can be successfully implemented as an effective method of postoperative analgesia.

Intended audience: Healthcare professionals and clinicians.

Transcript

Speaker: Stay Current

Click "Show Transcript" to view the full transcription (833 characters)

Comments

Loading comments...