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Nonelective coronary artery bypass graft outcomes are adversely impacted by Coronavirus disease 2019 infection, but not altered processes of care: A National COVID Cohort Collaborative and National Surgery Quality Improvement Program analysisCentral MessagePerspective

Authors :
Emily A. Grimsley, MD
Johnathan V. Torikashvili, BS
Haroon M. Janjua, MS
Meagan D. Read, MD
Anai N. Kothari, MD, MS
Nate B. Verhagen, BS
Ricardo Pietrobon, MD, PhD
Paul C. Kuo, MD, MS, MBA
Michael P. Rogers, MD, MS
Adam B. Wilcox
Adam M. Lee
Alexis Graves
Alfred (Jerrod) Anzalone
Amin Manna
Amit Saha
Amy Olex
Andrea Zhou
Andrew E. Williams
Andrew Southerland
Andrew T. Girvin
Anita Walden
Anjali A. Sharathkumar
Benjamin Amor
Benjamin Bates
Brian Hendricks
Brijesh Patel
Caleb Alexander
Carolyn Bramante
Cavin Ward-Caviness
Charisse Madlock-Brown
Christine Suver
Christopher Chute
Christopher Dillon
Chunlei Wu
Clare Schmitt
Cliff Takemoto
Dan Housman
Davera Gabriel
David A. Eichmann
Diego Mazzotti
Don Brown
Eilis Boudreau
Elaine Hill
Elizabeth Zampino
Emily Carlson Marti
Emily R. Pfaff
Evan French
Farrukh M. Koraishy
Federico Mariona
Fred Prior
George Sokos
Greg Martin
Harold Lehmann
Heidi Spratt
Hemalkumar Mehta
Hongfang Liu
Hythem Sidky
J.W. Awori Hayanga
Jami Pincavitch
Jaylyn Clark
Jeremy Richard Harper
Jessica Islam
Jin Ge
Joel Gagnier
Joel H. Saltz
Joel Saltz
Johanna Loomba
John Buse
Jomol Mathew
Joni L. Rutter
Julie A. McMurry
Justin Guinney
Justin Starren
Karen Crowley
Katie Rebecca Bradwell
Kellie M. Walters
Ken Wilkins
Kenneth R. Gersing
Kenrick Dwain Cato
Kimberly Murray
Kristin Kostka
Lavance Northington
Lee Allan Pyles
Leonie Misquitta
Lesley Cottrell
Lili Portilla
Mariam Deacy
Mark M. Bissell
Marshall Clark
Mary Emmett
Mary Morrison Saltz
Matvey B. Palchuk
Melissa A. Haendel
Meredith Adams
Meredith Temple-O'Connor
Michael G. Kurilla
Michele Morris
Nabeel Qureshi
Nasia Safdar
Nicole Garbarini
Noha Sharafeldin
Ofer Sadan
Patricia A. Francis
Penny Wung Burgoon
Peter Robinson
Philip R.O. Payne
Rafael Fuentes
Randeep Jawa
Rebecca Erwin-Cohen
Rena Patel
Richard A. Moffitt
Richard L. Zhu
Rishi Kamaleswaran
Robert Hurley
Robert T. Miller
Saiju Pyarajan
Sam G. Michael
Samuel Bozzette
Sandeep Mallipattu
Satyanarayana Vedula
Scott Chapman
Shawn T. O'Neil
Soko Setoguchi
Stephanie S. Hong
Steve Johnson
Tellen D. Bennett
Tiffany Callahan
Umit Topaloglu
Usman Sheikh
Valery Gordon
Vignesh Subbian
Warren A. Kibbe
Wenndy Hernandez
Will Beasley
Will Cooper
William Hillegass
Xiaohan Tanner Zhang
Source :
JTCVS Open, Vol 16, Iss , Pp 342-352 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

Objective: The effects of Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection and altered processes of care on nonelective coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) outcomes remain unknown. We hypothesized that patients with COVID-19 infection would have longer hospital lengths of stay and greater mortality compared with COVID-negative patients, but that these outcomes would not differ between COVID-negative and pre-COVID controls. Methods: The National COVID Cohort Collaborative 2020-2022 was queried for adult patients undergoing CABG. Patients were divided into COVID-negative, COVID-active, and COVID-convalescent groups. Pre-COVID control patients were drawn from the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program database. Adjusted analysis of the 3 COVID groups was performed via generalized linear models. Results: A total of 17,293 patients underwent nonelective CABG, including 16,252 COVID-negative, 127 COVID-active, 367 COVID-convalescent, and 2254 pre-COVID patients. Compared to pre-COVID patients, COVID-negative patients had no difference in mortality, whereas COVID-active patients experienced increased mortality. Mortality and pneumonia were higher in COVID-active patients compared to COVID-negative and COVID-convalescent patients. Adjusted analysis demonstrated that COVID-active patients had higher in-hospital mortality, 30- and 90-day mortality, and pneumonia compared to COVID-negative patients. COVID-convalescent patients had a shorter length of stay but a higher rate of renal impairment. Conclusions: Traditional care processes were altered during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our data show that nonelective CABG in patients with active COVID-19 is associated with significantly increased rates of mortality and pneumonia. The equivalent mortality in COVID-negative and pre-COVID patients suggests that pandemic-associated changes in processes of care did not impact CABG outcomes. Additional research into optimal timing of CABG after COVID infection is warranted.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26662736
Volume :
16
Issue :
342-352
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JTCVS Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.21efb68f029e459093a6ac34c9f6ea42
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xjon.2023.09.020