1. Hospital-free days in the first year after lung transplantation and subsequent survival
- Author
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Reda E. Girgis, Austin Frisch, Cameron K. Lawson, Benjamin Kowalske, Lindsey LeQuia, Ryan J. Hadley, Sheila Krishnan, Gayathri Sathiyamoorthy, and Edward T. Murphy
- Subjects
hospital-free days ,survival ,lung transplant ,readmissions ,length of hospital stay ,Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
Background: Complications occurring during the first postoperative year after lung transplantation increase the risk of long-term mortality. These events often lead to prolonged and repeated hospitalizations. We sought to assess the relationship between days outside the hospital or hospital-free days (HFD) during the first post-transplant year among 1-year survivors and subsequent retransplant-free survival. Methods: In a single-center study, we derived total inpatient days (initial transplant episode, readmission, and emergency room/observation) from the electronic medical record of lung transplant recipients who survived 1 year. The cohort was divided into HFD quartiles and Kaplan-Meier curves of subsequent transplant-free survival were compared with log-rank analysis. A Cox proportional hazards model was used to test the association of HFD with outcome and adjusted for selected variables. Results: Among 238 patients, 42 deaths and 2 retransplants occurred after a median of 3.6 years post-transplant. The median HFD was 341 (interquartile range: 324, 348). Estimated transplant-free survival at 3 and 5 years post-transplant in the lowest quartile of HFD (79% and 56%, respectively) was considerably worse compared with the first quartile (98% and 94%; p
- Published
- 2024
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