Major Scope

  •  Colon and Rectal Surgery
  •  General Surgery
  •  Gynecologic Oncology
  •  Plastic Surgery
  •  Neurological Surgery
  •  Orthopaedic Surgery
  •  Orthopaedic Surgery of the Spine
  •  Neonatal Surgery
  •  Prenatal Surgery
  •  Trauma Surgery
  •  Surgical Intensivists, Specializing In Critical Care Patients
  •  Thoracic Surgery
  •  Congenital Cardiac Surgery
  •  Thoracic Surgery-Integrated
  •  Vascular Surgery

Abstract

Citation: World J Surg Surg Res. 2018;1(1):1075.DOI: 10.25107/2637-4625.1075

A Gender-Focused Analysis of 36 Perioperative Risk Factors on Long Term Survival of Acute Type A Aortic Dissection - Equal Chances?

Frank Harig, Anna Engel, Johannes Rösch and Michael Weyand

Department of Cardiac Surgery, University Hospital Erlangen, Germany
Department of Cardiology and Angiology, University Hospital Erlangen, Germany

*Correspondance to: Frank Harig 

 PDF  Full Text Research Article | Open Access

Abstract:

We focused on gender specific perioperative risk factors for the survival of an acute Stanford type A aortic dissection. A cohort of 147 patients undergoing surgery since 2004 was studied in a 9 year follow-up. Analysis was performed using Cox-proportional hazard model focusing on 36 variables. Survival after 1 y (5y, 10y) was 98% (88%, 50%). Early mortality was 25%, 27% female, with a higher age (+10 y, mean, 64 ± 10 y) than men. In the 7th decade, percentage of women was as twofold higher and threefold higher in the 8th decade. Survival probability (Log rank test) for the first postoperative year was 0.82/0.77 (female/male) for 5 years 0.70/0.71, and 0.46/0.50 for 10 years. Risk factor analysis showed women having a high hazard ratio for death in case of re-sternotomy (16.543), bleeding (8.1), and renal insufficiency (3.4). Only EURO-Score (1.103, p=0.038) and length of hospital stay (0.849, p=0.015) were significant risk factors for death. The survival curve declines between 5 and 10 years (88% to 50%). In male patients, age and resternotomy had a significant influence on survival. Women had a higher incidence for aortic type a dissection in the 7th and 8th decades. Gender did not influence survival.

Keywords:

Aortic type A dissection; Gender specific risk factors; IRAD

Cite the Article:

Harig F, Engel A, Rösch J, Weyand M. A Gender-Focused Analysis of 36 Perioperative Risk Factors on Long Term Survival of Acute Type A Aortic Dissection - Equal Chances?. World J Surg Surgical Res. 2018; 1: 1075.

Journal Basic Info

  • Impact Factor: 2.466**
  • H-Index: 6
  • ISSN: 2637-4625
  • DOI: 10.25107/2637-4625

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