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Risk Factors of Postoperative Vomiting in the Eye of “Real-World Evidence”—Modifiable and Clinical Setting-Dependent Risk Factors in Surgical Trauma Patients

Numerous studies on postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) have been carried out since the early days of contemporary surgery. The incidence of PONV has been greatly reduced in recent years and new drugs for PONV keep evolving in the market; however, a substantial number of patients are still unde...

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Autores principales: Poon, Yan-Yuen, Ke, Ting-Yu, Hung, Kuo-Chuan, Lu, Hsiao-Feng, Chiang, Min-Hsien, Chin, Jo-Chi, Wu, Shao-Chun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8151314/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34066821
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm11050386
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author Poon, Yan-Yuen
Ke, Ting-Yu
Hung, Kuo-Chuan
Lu, Hsiao-Feng
Chiang, Min-Hsien
Chin, Jo-Chi
Wu, Shao-Chun
author_facet Poon, Yan-Yuen
Ke, Ting-Yu
Hung, Kuo-Chuan
Lu, Hsiao-Feng
Chiang, Min-Hsien
Chin, Jo-Chi
Wu, Shao-Chun
author_sort Poon, Yan-Yuen
collection PubMed
description Numerous studies on postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) have been carried out since the early days of contemporary surgery. The incidence of PONV has been greatly reduced in recent years and new drugs for PONV keep evolving in the market; however, a substantial number of patients are still under the threat of PONV. Female gender, non-smokers, a history of PONV/motion sickness, and postoperative opioid use are four well-recognized risk factors of PONV. Many potential risk factors reported in previous studies were not consistently presented as predictors for PONV. Two questions then arise; are risk factors clinical setting dependent and are risk factors modifiable? We attempted to answer the questions through a comprehensive review of perioperative records of surgical patients from the Trauma Department of our hospital. As nausea is subjective and no standard is applicable for its measurement, postoperative vomiting (POV) was used as an endpoint in this study. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to address the POV issue in surgical trauma patients. A total of 855 patients were enrolled in this study after excluding age below 20 years old, total intravenous anesthesia, desflurane anesthesia, or records with missing data. Our results showed that female gender (OR 4.89) is the strongest predicting factor, followed by a less potent predicting factor—more intraoperative opioid consumption (OR 1.07)—which favor more POV. More intraoperative crystalloid supply (OR 0.71) and a higher body weight (OR 0.9) favor less POV. Other potential risk factors did not reach statistical significance in this study as independent risk factors. Our results also showed that when the intraoperative crystalloid infusion rate is greater than 4 mL/kg/h (OR 0.20), it favors a lower rate of POV; when intraoperative opioid consumption is greater than 12 mg morphine equivalents, MME (OR 1.87), it favors a higher rate of POV. We concluded that dominance of any independent risk factor over other risk factors depends on how individual factors interact with the clinical setting. Some risk factors could be modified, and a cut-off value could be derived to facilitate a better plan for POV prevention.
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spelling pubmed-81513142021-05-27 Risk Factors of Postoperative Vomiting in the Eye of “Real-World Evidence”—Modifiable and Clinical Setting-Dependent Risk Factors in Surgical Trauma Patients Poon, Yan-Yuen Ke, Ting-Yu Hung, Kuo-Chuan Lu, Hsiao-Feng Chiang, Min-Hsien Chin, Jo-Chi Wu, Shao-Chun J Pers Med Article Numerous studies on postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV) have been carried out since the early days of contemporary surgery. The incidence of PONV has been greatly reduced in recent years and new drugs for PONV keep evolving in the market; however, a substantial number of patients are still under the threat of PONV. Female gender, non-smokers, a history of PONV/motion sickness, and postoperative opioid use are four well-recognized risk factors of PONV. Many potential risk factors reported in previous studies were not consistently presented as predictors for PONV. Two questions then arise; are risk factors clinical setting dependent and are risk factors modifiable? We attempted to answer the questions through a comprehensive review of perioperative records of surgical patients from the Trauma Department of our hospital. As nausea is subjective and no standard is applicable for its measurement, postoperative vomiting (POV) was used as an endpoint in this study. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to address the POV issue in surgical trauma patients. A total of 855 patients were enrolled in this study after excluding age below 20 years old, total intravenous anesthesia, desflurane anesthesia, or records with missing data. Our results showed that female gender (OR 4.89) is the strongest predicting factor, followed by a less potent predicting factor—more intraoperative opioid consumption (OR 1.07)—which favor more POV. More intraoperative crystalloid supply (OR 0.71) and a higher body weight (OR 0.9) favor less POV. Other potential risk factors did not reach statistical significance in this study as independent risk factors. Our results also showed that when the intraoperative crystalloid infusion rate is greater than 4 mL/kg/h (OR 0.20), it favors a lower rate of POV; when intraoperative opioid consumption is greater than 12 mg morphine equivalents, MME (OR 1.87), it favors a higher rate of POV. We concluded that dominance of any independent risk factor over other risk factors depends on how individual factors interact with the clinical setting. Some risk factors could be modified, and a cut-off value could be derived to facilitate a better plan for POV prevention. MDPI 2021-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8151314/ /pubmed/34066821 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm11050386 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Poon, Yan-Yuen
Ke, Ting-Yu
Hung, Kuo-Chuan
Lu, Hsiao-Feng
Chiang, Min-Hsien
Chin, Jo-Chi
Wu, Shao-Chun
Risk Factors of Postoperative Vomiting in the Eye of “Real-World Evidence”—Modifiable and Clinical Setting-Dependent Risk Factors in Surgical Trauma Patients
title Risk Factors of Postoperative Vomiting in the Eye of “Real-World Evidence”—Modifiable and Clinical Setting-Dependent Risk Factors in Surgical Trauma Patients
title_full Risk Factors of Postoperative Vomiting in the Eye of “Real-World Evidence”—Modifiable and Clinical Setting-Dependent Risk Factors in Surgical Trauma Patients
title_fullStr Risk Factors of Postoperative Vomiting in the Eye of “Real-World Evidence”—Modifiable and Clinical Setting-Dependent Risk Factors in Surgical Trauma Patients
title_full_unstemmed Risk Factors of Postoperative Vomiting in the Eye of “Real-World Evidence”—Modifiable and Clinical Setting-Dependent Risk Factors in Surgical Trauma Patients
title_short Risk Factors of Postoperative Vomiting in the Eye of “Real-World Evidence”—Modifiable and Clinical Setting-Dependent Risk Factors in Surgical Trauma Patients
title_sort risk factors of postoperative vomiting in the eye of “real-world evidence”—modifiable and clinical setting-dependent risk factors in surgical trauma patients
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8151314/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34066821
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm11050386
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