Days alive and out of hospital after surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer: A Danish nationwide cohort study

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Days alive and out of hospital after surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer : A Danish nationwide cohort study. / Ekmann-Gade, Anne Weng; Høgdall, Claus; Seibæk, Lene; Noer, Mette Calundann; Rasmussen, Annette; Schnack, Tine Henrichsen.

In: European Journal of Surgical Oncology, Vol. 49, No. 10, 107039, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ekmann-Gade, AW, Høgdall, C, Seibæk, L, Noer, MC, Rasmussen, A & Schnack, TH 2023, 'Days alive and out of hospital after surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer: A Danish nationwide cohort study', European Journal of Surgical Oncology, vol. 49, no. 10, 107039. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejso.2023.107039

APA

Ekmann-Gade, A. W., Høgdall, C., Seibæk, L., Noer, M. C., Rasmussen, A., & Schnack, T. H. (2023). Days alive and out of hospital after surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer: A Danish nationwide cohort study. European Journal of Surgical Oncology, 49(10), [107039]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejso.2023.107039

Vancouver

Ekmann-Gade AW, Høgdall C, Seibæk L, Noer MC, Rasmussen A, Schnack TH. Days alive and out of hospital after surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer: A Danish nationwide cohort study. European Journal of Surgical Oncology. 2023;49(10). 107039. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejso.2023.107039

Author

Ekmann-Gade, Anne Weng ; Høgdall, Claus ; Seibæk, Lene ; Noer, Mette Calundann ; Rasmussen, Annette ; Schnack, Tine Henrichsen. / Days alive and out of hospital after surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer : A Danish nationwide cohort study. In: European Journal of Surgical Oncology. 2023 ; Vol. 49, No. 10.

Bibtex

@article{669c43268ab843d597d2ed5efb974517,
title = "Days alive and out of hospital after surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer: A Danish nationwide cohort study",
abstract = "Objective: Days alive and out of hospital (DAOH) is a validated outcome measure in perioperative trials integrating information on primary hospitalization, readmissions, and mortality. It is negatively associated with advanced age. However, DAOH has not been described for surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC), primarily diagnosed in older patients. Methods: We conducted a Danish nationwide cohort study including patients undergoing debulking surgery for EOC from 2013 to 2018. DAOH was explored for 30 (DAOH30), 90 (DAOH90), and 180 (DAOH180) postoperative days in younger (<70 years) and older (≥70 years) patients with advanced-stage disease stratified by surgical modality (primary (PDS) or interval debulking surgery (IDS)). We examined the associations between patient- and surgical outcomes and low or high DAOH30. Results: Overall, 1168 patients had stage IIIC-IV disease and underwent debulking surgery. DAOH30 was 22 days [interquartile range (IQR): 18, 25] and 23 days [IQR: 18, 25] for younger and older patients treated with PDS, respectively. For IDS, DAOH30 was 25 days [IQR: 22, 26] for younger and 25 days[IQR: 21, 26] for older patients. We found no significant differences between age cohorts regarding DAOH30, DAOH90, and DAOH180. Low DAOH30 was associated with poor performance status, PDS, extensive surgery, and long duration of surgery in adjusted analysis. Conclusions: DAOH did not differ significantly between age cohorts. Surgical rather than patient-related factors were associated with low DAOH30. Our results likely reflect a high selection of fit older patients for surgery, reducing the patient-related differences between younger and older patients receiving surgical treatment.",
keywords = "Aged, Cytoreduction surgical procedures, Length of stay, Mortality, Ovarian epithelial carcinoma, Patient readmission",
author = "Ekmann-Gade, {Anne Weng} and Claus H{\o}gdall and Lene Seib{\ae}k and Noer, {Mette Calundann} and Annette Rasmussen and Schnack, {Tine Henrichsen}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.ejso.2023.107039",
language = "English",
volume = "49",
journal = "European Journal of Surgical Oncology",
issn = "0748-7983",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Days alive and out of hospital after surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer

T2 - A Danish nationwide cohort study

AU - Ekmann-Gade, Anne Weng

AU - Høgdall, Claus

AU - Seibæk, Lene

AU - Noer, Mette Calundann

AU - Rasmussen, Annette

AU - Schnack, Tine Henrichsen

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Objective: Days alive and out of hospital (DAOH) is a validated outcome measure in perioperative trials integrating information on primary hospitalization, readmissions, and mortality. It is negatively associated with advanced age. However, DAOH has not been described for surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC), primarily diagnosed in older patients. Methods: We conducted a Danish nationwide cohort study including patients undergoing debulking surgery for EOC from 2013 to 2018. DAOH was explored for 30 (DAOH30), 90 (DAOH90), and 180 (DAOH180) postoperative days in younger (<70 years) and older (≥70 years) patients with advanced-stage disease stratified by surgical modality (primary (PDS) or interval debulking surgery (IDS)). We examined the associations between patient- and surgical outcomes and low or high DAOH30. Results: Overall, 1168 patients had stage IIIC-IV disease and underwent debulking surgery. DAOH30 was 22 days [interquartile range (IQR): 18, 25] and 23 days [IQR: 18, 25] for younger and older patients treated with PDS, respectively. For IDS, DAOH30 was 25 days [IQR: 22, 26] for younger and 25 days[IQR: 21, 26] for older patients. We found no significant differences between age cohorts regarding DAOH30, DAOH90, and DAOH180. Low DAOH30 was associated with poor performance status, PDS, extensive surgery, and long duration of surgery in adjusted analysis. Conclusions: DAOH did not differ significantly between age cohorts. Surgical rather than patient-related factors were associated with low DAOH30. Our results likely reflect a high selection of fit older patients for surgery, reducing the patient-related differences between younger and older patients receiving surgical treatment.

AB - Objective: Days alive and out of hospital (DAOH) is a validated outcome measure in perioperative trials integrating information on primary hospitalization, readmissions, and mortality. It is negatively associated with advanced age. However, DAOH has not been described for surgical treatment of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC), primarily diagnosed in older patients. Methods: We conducted a Danish nationwide cohort study including patients undergoing debulking surgery for EOC from 2013 to 2018. DAOH was explored for 30 (DAOH30), 90 (DAOH90), and 180 (DAOH180) postoperative days in younger (<70 years) and older (≥70 years) patients with advanced-stage disease stratified by surgical modality (primary (PDS) or interval debulking surgery (IDS)). We examined the associations between patient- and surgical outcomes and low or high DAOH30. Results: Overall, 1168 patients had stage IIIC-IV disease and underwent debulking surgery. DAOH30 was 22 days [interquartile range (IQR): 18, 25] and 23 days [IQR: 18, 25] for younger and older patients treated with PDS, respectively. For IDS, DAOH30 was 25 days [IQR: 22, 26] for younger and 25 days[IQR: 21, 26] for older patients. We found no significant differences between age cohorts regarding DAOH30, DAOH90, and DAOH180. Low DAOH30 was associated with poor performance status, PDS, extensive surgery, and long duration of surgery in adjusted analysis. Conclusions: DAOH did not differ significantly between age cohorts. Surgical rather than patient-related factors were associated with low DAOH30. Our results likely reflect a high selection of fit older patients for surgery, reducing the patient-related differences between younger and older patients receiving surgical treatment.

KW - Aged

KW - Cytoreduction surgical procedures

KW - Length of stay

KW - Mortality

KW - Ovarian epithelial carcinoma

KW - Patient readmission

U2 - 10.1016/j.ejso.2023.107039

DO - 10.1016/j.ejso.2023.107039

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37639861

AN - SCOPUS:85169053723

VL - 49

JO - European Journal of Surgical Oncology

JF - European Journal of Surgical Oncology

SN - 0748-7983

IS - 10

M1 - 107039

ER -

ID: 396014982