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Gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: Evaluation of morbidity and mortality. Protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in Italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (The GESEMM study)

Gastrointestinal emergencies (GE) are frequently encountered in emergency department (ED), and patients can present with wide-ranging symptoms. more than 3 million patients admitted to US hospitals each year for EGS diagnoses, more than the sum of all new cancer diagnoses. In addition to the complex...

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Autores principales: Costa, Gianluca, Fransvea, Pietro, Puccioni, Caterina, Giovinazzo, Francesco, Carannante, Filippo, Bianco, Gianfranco, Catamero, Alberto, Masciana, Gianluca, Miacci, Valentina, Caricato, Marco, Capolupo, Gabriella Teresa, Sganga, Gabriele
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9524583/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36189400
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2022.927044
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author Costa, Gianluca
Fransvea, Pietro
Puccioni, Caterina
Giovinazzo, Francesco
Carannante, Filippo
Bianco, Gianfranco
Catamero, Alberto
Masciana, Gianluca
Miacci, Valentina
Caricato, Marco
Capolupo, Gabriella Teresa
Sganga, Gabriele
author_facet Costa, Gianluca
Fransvea, Pietro
Puccioni, Caterina
Giovinazzo, Francesco
Carannante, Filippo
Bianco, Gianfranco
Catamero, Alberto
Masciana, Gianluca
Miacci, Valentina
Caricato, Marco
Capolupo, Gabriella Teresa
Sganga, Gabriele
author_sort Costa, Gianluca
collection PubMed
description Gastrointestinal emergencies (GE) are frequently encountered in emergency department (ED), and patients can present with wide-ranging symptoms. more than 3 million patients admitted to US hospitals each year for EGS diagnoses, more than the sum of all new cancer diagnoses. In addition to the complexity of the urgent surgical patient (often suffering from multiple co-morbidities), there is the unpredictability and the severity of the event. In the light of this, these patients need a rapid decision-making process that allows a correct diagnosis and an adequate and timely treatment. The primary endpoint of this Italian nationwide study is to analyze the clinicopathological findings, management strategies and short-term outcomes of gastrointestinal emergency procedures performed in patients over 18. Secondary endpoints will be to evaluate to analyze the prognostic role of existing risk-scores to define the most suitable scoring system for gastro-intestinal surgical emergency. The primary outcomes are 30-day overall postoperative morbidity and mortality rates. Secondary outcomes are 30-day postoperative morbidity and mortality rates, stratified for each procedure or cause of intervention, length of hospital stay, admission and length of stay in ICU, and place of discharge (home or rehabilitation or care facility). In conclusion, to improve the level of care that should be reserved for these patients, we aim to analyze the clinicopathological findings, management strategies and short-term outcomes of gastrointestinal emergency procedures performed in patients over 18, to analyze the prognostic role of existing risk-scores and to define new tools suitable for EGS. This process could ameliorate outcomes and avoid futile treatments. These results may potentially influence the survival of many high-risk EGS procedure.
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spelling pubmed-95245832022-10-01 Gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: Evaluation of morbidity and mortality. Protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in Italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (The GESEMM study) Costa, Gianluca Fransvea, Pietro Puccioni, Caterina Giovinazzo, Francesco Carannante, Filippo Bianco, Gianfranco Catamero, Alberto Masciana, Gianluca Miacci, Valentina Caricato, Marco Capolupo, Gabriella Teresa Sganga, Gabriele Front Surg Surgery Gastrointestinal emergencies (GE) are frequently encountered in emergency department (ED), and patients can present with wide-ranging symptoms. more than 3 million patients admitted to US hospitals each year for EGS diagnoses, more than the sum of all new cancer diagnoses. In addition to the complexity of the urgent surgical patient (often suffering from multiple co-morbidities), there is the unpredictability and the severity of the event. In the light of this, these patients need a rapid decision-making process that allows a correct diagnosis and an adequate and timely treatment. The primary endpoint of this Italian nationwide study is to analyze the clinicopathological findings, management strategies and short-term outcomes of gastrointestinal emergency procedures performed in patients over 18. Secondary endpoints will be to evaluate to analyze the prognostic role of existing risk-scores to define the most suitable scoring system for gastro-intestinal surgical emergency. The primary outcomes are 30-day overall postoperative morbidity and mortality rates. Secondary outcomes are 30-day postoperative morbidity and mortality rates, stratified for each procedure or cause of intervention, length of hospital stay, admission and length of stay in ICU, and place of discharge (home or rehabilitation or care facility). In conclusion, to improve the level of care that should be reserved for these patients, we aim to analyze the clinicopathological findings, management strategies and short-term outcomes of gastrointestinal emergency procedures performed in patients over 18, to analyze the prognostic role of existing risk-scores and to define new tools suitable for EGS. This process could ameliorate outcomes and avoid futile treatments. These results may potentially influence the survival of many high-risk EGS procedure. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-09-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9524583/ /pubmed/36189400 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2022.927044 Text en © 2022 Costa, Fransvea, Puccioni, Giovinazzo, Carannante, Bianco, Catamero, Masciana, Miacci, Caricato, Campolupo and Sganga. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Surgery
Costa, Gianluca
Fransvea, Pietro
Puccioni, Caterina
Giovinazzo, Francesco
Carannante, Filippo
Bianco, Gianfranco
Catamero, Alberto
Masciana, Gianluca
Miacci, Valentina
Caricato, Marco
Capolupo, Gabriella Teresa
Sganga, Gabriele
Gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: Evaluation of morbidity and mortality. Protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in Italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (The GESEMM study)
title Gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: Evaluation of morbidity and mortality. Protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in Italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (The GESEMM study)
title_full Gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: Evaluation of morbidity and mortality. Protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in Italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (The GESEMM study)
title_fullStr Gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: Evaluation of morbidity and mortality. Protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in Italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (The GESEMM study)
title_full_unstemmed Gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: Evaluation of morbidity and mortality. Protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in Italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (The GESEMM study)
title_short Gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: Evaluation of morbidity and mortality. Protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in Italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (The GESEMM study)
title_sort gastro-intestinal emergency surgery: evaluation of morbidity and mortality. protocol of a prospective, multicenter study in italy for evaluating the burden of abdominal emergency surgery in different age groups. (the gesemm study)
topic Surgery
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9524583/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36189400
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fsurg.2022.927044
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