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Multicentre, propensity-matched, cohort study assessing early post-operative NSAIDs and adverse events following colorectal surgery James Glasbey on behalf of the STARSurg Collaborative Final Year Medical Student, Cardiff University

STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

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Tripartite is an international colorectal meeting of surgeons from across Europe, Australasia and the Americas. Here we presented the colorectal-specific findings of STARSurg's first national collaborative cohort study, assesing the safety profile of NSAIDs in colorectal resection.

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Page 1: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Multicentre, propensity-matched, cohort study assessing early post-

operative NSAIDs and adverse events following colorectal surgery

James Glasbey

on behalf of the STARSurg CollaborativeFinal Year Medical Student, Cardiff University

Page 2: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Background• Optimal analgesic regime post-GI surgery has not yet been determined

• NSAIDs are used as part of ERAS & WHO pain ladder

• NSAIDs have been associated with increased operation-specific complications, including anastomotic leak (Klein M, BMJ, 2012;345:e6166)

Page 3: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

• Prospective, multicentre observational cohort study

• Delivered by a student-driven research collaboration with a dedicated study protocol

Study Design

Page 4: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Methods

• Inclusion: Adults, consecutive elective or emergency, partial or complete gastrointestinal resections over a 2-week period

(September – October 2013)

• Primary outcome: 30-day Clavien-Dindo complication rate

Page 5: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Clavien DindoI – deviation from standard post-op course within ‘allowed therapeutic regimes’

II – complication req. pharmacological intervention

III – complication req. surgical, endoscopic or radiological intervention

IV – complication req. ICU admission

V – death

Min

or

Majo

r

Page 6: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Methods

• Power calculation (80%, n = 900)

• Propensity-score matching

• Multivariate binary logistic regression - odds ratios (OR) & 95% C.I.

• Data validation

Page 7: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Hypothesis

Early post-operative NSAID administration is associated with increased operation-specific

complications

Page 8: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Results

• 1513 patients from 110 centres across the UK

• Mean age 64.7y (95% CI 63.9-65.5)

• 35% were ASA III-V

Page 9: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Results• 1172 colorectal resections (76%)

• 74% elective, 26% emergency

• 41% laparoscopic, 59% open

• 26% permanent –ostomy, 22% temporary -ostomy

Page 10: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Results

• During D1-3 post-operatively, 19% patients received an NSAID

• Majority of NSAIDs prescribed were ibuprofen preparations (70%)

Page 11: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Results

• Complications occurred in 62% of patients, which were major in 17% and minor in 45%

• Anastomotic leak rate was 4.9%

Page 12: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Results

Page 13: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Limitations• Narrow time window for data collection• Risk of selection bias

• Large, pragmatic real-world population with high external validity

• Risk-adjusted• 98% accuracy in validated data points

Page 14: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

Key Messages• Early NSAID use was associated with reduction in total complications following colorectal resection

• No evident increase in anastomotic leak (underpowered)

• The student-led, collaborative model can rapidly deliver high-quality, multi-centre datasets

Page 15: STARSurg, Tripartite Colorectal Conference, July 2014

www.starsurg.org

[email protected]

Questions?