4.5 Article

Oxygen administration during surgery and postoperative organ injury: observational cohort study

Journal

BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL
Volume 379, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmj-2022-070941

Keywords

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Funding

  1. United States National Institutes of Health (NIH) [K23GM129662]
  2. NIH [R01GM112871, R35GM145375, K23HL143053]
  3. Association of University Anesthesiologists' IMPACT

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This study examines the association between supraphysiological oxygen administration during surgery and postoperative kidney, heart, and lung injury. The results indicate that increased oxygen exposure is associated with a higher risk of acute kidney injury, myocardial injury, and lung injury.
Objective To examine whether supraphysiological oxygen administration during surgery is associated with lower or higher postoperative kidney, heart, and lung injury. Design Observational cohort study. Setting 42 medical centers across the United States participating in the Multicenter Perioperative Outcomes Group data registry. Participants Adult patients undergoing surgical procedures >= 120 minutes' duration with general anesthesia and endotracheal intubation who were admitted to hospital after surgery between January 2016 and November 2018. Intervention Supraphysiological oxygen administration, defined as the area under the curve of the fraction of inspired oxygen above air (21%) during minutes when the hemoglobin oxygen saturation was greater than 92%. Main outcomes Primary endpoints were acute kidney injury defined using Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes criteria, myocardial injury defined as serum troponin >0.04 ng/mL within 72 hours of surgery, and lung injury defined using international classification of diseases hospital discharge diagnosis codes. Results The cohort comprised 350 647 patients with median age 59 years (interquartile range 46-69 years), 180 546 women (51.5%), and median duration of surgery 205 minutes (interquartile range 158-279 minutes). Acute kidney injury was diagnosed in 19 207 of 297 554 patients (6.5%), myocardial injury in 8972 of 320 527 (2.8%), and lung injury in 13 789 of 312 161 (4.4%). The median fraction of inspired oxygen was 54.0% (interquartile range 47.5%-60.0%), and the area under the curve of supraphysiological inspired oxygen was 7951% min (5870-11 107% min), equivalent to an 80% fraction of inspired oxygen throughout a 135 minute procedure, for example. After accounting for baseline covariates and other potential confounding variables, increased oxygen exposure was associated with a higher risk of acute kidney injury, myocardial injury, and lung injury. Patients at the 75th centile for the area under the curve of the fraction of inspired oxygen had 26% greater odds of acute kidney injury (95% confidence interval 22% to 30%), 12% greater odds of myocardial injury (7% to 17%), and 14% greater odds of lung injury (12% to 16%) compared with patients at the 25th centile. Sensitivity analyses evaluating alternative definitions of the exposure, restricting the cohort, and conducting an instrumental variable analysis confirmed these observations. Conclusions Increased supraphysiological oxygen administration during surgery was associated with a higher incidence of kidney, myocardial, and lung injury. Residual confounding of these associations cannot be excluded.

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