4.5 Article

Surgical Outcomes After Esophagectomy in Patients with Achalasia: a NSQIP Matched Analysis With Non-Achalasia Esophagectomy Patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF GASTROINTESTINAL SURGERY
Volume 25, Issue 10, Pages 2455-2462

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11605-021-05056-4

Keywords

NSQIP; Achalasia; esophagectomy; end-stage; short-term

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The study evaluated surgical outcomes in patients with achalasia compared to non-achalasia patients following esophagectomy. Results showed no significant difference in overall complications, readmission, reoperation, or mortality between both groups. Postoperative sepsis was higher in the achalasia group, while organ space SSI was higher in the non-achalasia group.
Purpose The data on surgical outcomes of esophagectomy in patients with achalasia is limited. We sought to evaluate surgical outcomes in achalasia patients after an esophagectomy versus non-achalasia patients to elucidate if the outcomes are affected by the diagnosis. Methods We conducted a retrospective review of the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database (2010-2018). Patients who underwent an esophagectomy (open or laparoscopic approach) were included. Patients were divided into two groups, achalasia vs non-achalasia patients, and matched using propensity match analysis. Results Of the 10,997 esophagectomy patients who met inclusion criteria, 213 (1.9%) patients had a diagnosis of achalasia. A total of 418 patients were included for the final analysis, with 209 patients in each group (achalasia vs non-achalasia). The overall median age was 57 years (IQR 47-65 years), and 48.6% were female. Most underwent an open (93.1%) vs laparoscopic (6.9%) esophagectomy. Overall complication rate was 40%. No difference was identified on overall complications, readmission, reoperation, or mortality between both groups. Postoperative sepsis was significantly higher in the achalasia group, and organ space SSI was higher in the non-achalasia group. Multivariable analysis showed that a diagnosis (achalasia or non-achalasia) was not predictive of reoperation or overall complications. Conclusion Esophagectomy outcomes are similar in patients with achalasia vs non-achalasia, and the diagnosis of achalasia does not independently increase the risk of reoperation and overall complications. Finally, regardless of diagnosis, the potential for morbidity following esophagectomy, should to be discussed with patients in the preoperative setting.

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