TY - JOUR
T1 - Predicting the difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy
T2 - development and validation of a pre-operative risk score using an objective operative difficulty grading system
AU - the CholeS Study Group, West Midlands Research Collaborative
AU - Nassar, Ahmad H.M.
AU - Hodson, James
AU - Ng, Hwei J.
AU - Vohra, Ravi S.
AU - Katbeh, Tarek
AU - Zino, Samer
AU - Griffiths, Ewen A.
AU - Vohra, Ravinder S.
AU - Kirkham, Amanda J.
AU - Pasquali, Sandro
AU - Marriott, Paul
AU - Johnstone, Marianne
AU - Spreadborough, Philip
AU - Alderson, Derek
AU - Griffiths, Ewen A.
AU - Fenwick, Stephen
AU - Elmasry, Mohamed
AU - Nunes, Quentin M.
AU - Kennedy, David
AU - Khan, Raja Basit
AU - Khan, Muhammad A.S.
AU - Magee, Conor J.
AU - Jones, Steven M.
AU - Mason, Denise
AU - Parappally, Ciny P.
AU - Mathur, Pawan
AU - Saunders, Michael
AU - Jamel, Sara
AU - Haque, Samer Ul
AU - Zafar, Sara
AU - Shiwani, Muhammad Hanif
AU - Samuel, Nehemiah
AU - Dar, Farooq
AU - Jackson, Andrew
AU - Lovett, Bryony
AU - Dindyal, Shiva
AU - Winter, Hannah
AU - Fletcher, Ted
AU - Rahman, Saquib
AU - Wheatley, Kevin
AU - Nieto, Tom
AU - Ayaani, Soofiyah
AU - Youssef, Haney
AU - Nijjar, Rajwinder S.
AU - Watkin, Helen
AU - Naumann, David
AU - Emesih, Sophie
AU - Sarmah, Piyush B.
AU - Lee, Kathryn
AU - Spreadborough, Philip
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2020/10/1
Y1 - 2020/10/1
N2 - Background: The prediction of a difficult cholecystectomy has traditionally been based on certain pre-operative clinical and imaging factors. Most of the previous literature reported small patient cohorts and have not used an objective measure of operative difficulty. The aim of this study was to develop a pre-operative score to predict difficult cholecystectomy, as defined by a validated intra-operative difficulty grading scale. Method: Two cohorts from prospectively maintained databases of patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy were analysed: the CholeS Study (8755 patients) and a single surgeon series (4089 patients). Factors potentially predictive of difficulty were correlated to the Nassar intra-operative difficulty scale. A multivariable binary logistic regression analysis was then used to identify factors that were independently associated with difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy, defined as operative difficulty grades 3 to 5. The resulting model was then converted to a risk score, and validated on both internal and external datasets. Result: Increasing age and ASA classification, male gender, diagnosis of CBD stone or cholecystitis, thick-walled gallbladders, CBD dilation, use of pre-operative ERCP and non-elective operations were found to be significant independent predictors of difficult cases. A risk score based on these factors returned an area under the ROC curve of 0.789 (95% CI 0.773–0.806, p ' 0.001) on external validation, with 11.0% versus 80.0% of patients classified as low versus high risk having difficult surgeries. Conclusion: We have developed and validated a pre-operative scoring system that uses easily available pre-operative variables to predict difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomies. This scoring system should assist in patient selection for day case surgery, optimising pre-operative surgical planning (e.g. allocation of the procedure to a suitably trained surgeon) and counselling patients during the consent process. The score could also be used to risk adjust outcomes in future research.
AB - Background: The prediction of a difficult cholecystectomy has traditionally been based on certain pre-operative clinical and imaging factors. Most of the previous literature reported small patient cohorts and have not used an objective measure of operative difficulty. The aim of this study was to develop a pre-operative score to predict difficult cholecystectomy, as defined by a validated intra-operative difficulty grading scale. Method: Two cohorts from prospectively maintained databases of patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy were analysed: the CholeS Study (8755 patients) and a single surgeon series (4089 patients). Factors potentially predictive of difficulty were correlated to the Nassar intra-operative difficulty scale. A multivariable binary logistic regression analysis was then used to identify factors that were independently associated with difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomy, defined as operative difficulty grades 3 to 5. The resulting model was then converted to a risk score, and validated on both internal and external datasets. Result: Increasing age and ASA classification, male gender, diagnosis of CBD stone or cholecystitis, thick-walled gallbladders, CBD dilation, use of pre-operative ERCP and non-elective operations were found to be significant independent predictors of difficult cases. A risk score based on these factors returned an area under the ROC curve of 0.789 (95% CI 0.773–0.806, p ' 0.001) on external validation, with 11.0% versus 80.0% of patients classified as low versus high risk having difficult surgeries. Conclusion: We have developed and validated a pre-operative scoring system that uses easily available pre-operative variables to predict difficult laparoscopic cholecystectomies. This scoring system should assist in patient selection for day case surgery, optimising pre-operative surgical planning (e.g. allocation of the procedure to a suitably trained surgeon) and counselling patients during the consent process. The score could also be used to risk adjust outcomes in future research.
KW - Difficulty grading, difficult cholecystectomy
KW - Operative difficulty
KW - Predictive score
KW - Surgery, Laparoscopic, Cholecystectomy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85075077637&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00464-019-07244-5
DO - 10.1007/s00464-019-07244-5
M3 - Article
C2 - 31732855
AN - SCOPUS:85075077637
SN - 0930-2794
VL - 34
SP - 4549
EP - 4561
JO - Surgical Endoscopy
JF - Surgical Endoscopy
IS - 10
ER -