Head-to-Head Comparison: P-POSSUM and ACS-NSQIP® in Predicting Perioperative Risk in Robotic Surgery for Gynaecological Cancers

Author:

Sevinyan Lusine12ORCID,Asaalaarchchi Hasanthi1,Tailor Anil1,Williams Peter3,Evans Matthew4ORCID,Hodnett Darragh4,Arakkal Darshana1,Prabhu Pradeep4ORCID,Flint Melanie S.2ORCID,Madhuri Thumuluru Kavitha12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Gynaecological Oncology, Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trust, Guildford GU2 7XX, UK

2. School of Applied Sciences, University of Brighton, Brighton BN2 4GJ, UK

3. Department of Maths and Statistics, University of Surrey, Guildford GU2 7XH, UK

4. Department of Anaesthetics, Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trust, Guildford GU2 7XX, UK

Abstract

Purpose: In this retrospective pilot study, we aim to evaluate the accuracy and reliability of the P-POSSUM and ACS-NSQIP surgical risk calculators in predicting postoperative complications in gynaecological–oncological (GO) robotic surgery (RS). Methods: Retrospective data collection undertaken through a dedicated GO database and patient notes at a tertiary referral cancer centre. Following data lock with the actual post-op event/complication, the risk calculators were used to measure predictive scores for each patient. Baseline analysis of 153 patients, based on statistician advice, was undertaken to evaluate P-POSSUM and ACS-NSQIP validity and relevance in GO patients undergoing RS performed. Results: P-POSSUM reports on mortality and morbidity only; ACS-NSQIP reports some individual complications as well. ACS-NSQIP risk prediction was most accurate for venous thromboembolism (VTE) (area under the curve (AUC)-0.793) and pneumonia (AUC-0.657) and it showed 90% accuracy in prediction of five major complications (Brier score 0.01). Morbidity was much better predicted by ACS-NSQIP than by P-POSSUM (AUC-0.608 vs. AUC-0.551) with the same result in mortality prediction (Brier score 0.0000). Moreover, a statistically significant overestimation of morbidity has been shown by the P-POSSUM calculator (p = 0.018). Conclusions: Despite the limitations of this pilot study, the ACS-NSQIP risk calculator appears to be a better predictor of major complications and mortality, making it suitable for use by GO surgeons as an informed consent tool. Larger data collection and analyses are ongoing to validate this further.

Funder

GRACE

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference31 articles.

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