In case of heart and lung transplants the time of day has no affect on patient survival, suggests John Hopkins research.
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The research, , described in the Journal of the American Medical Association, covers 10 years of heart and lung transplants - more than 27,000 of them - at medical centers across the United States.
"This is one of the first papers to suggest that fatigue, sleep deprivation and odd hours really don''t hurt the patient. It''s a surprising finding," Shah says. "While we''ve felt this, other papers have suggested patients are at risk if they are treated at night. For patients undergoing heart and lung transplants, everything is fine - regardless of the hour, our study shows."
Heart and lung transplants are done whenever scarce organs become available, without regard for the clock or how much work a surgeon has already done that day, Shah noted, likely making results of the Hopkins study especially reassuring to patients and surgical teams.
Researchers have long worked to identify factors that contribute to medical errors, and attention has focused especially on medical staff fatigue associated with medical care outside of daytime hours. Several previous studies have linked nighttime care with worse outcomes. One study found that nighttime cardiac arrests were associated with lower survival and unfavorable neurological outcomes. Another found that urgent orthopedic surgery at night was linked to a higher rate of unplanned reoperation. A third found that nighttime kidney transplantation was associated with higher risk of graft failure and the need for more emergency reoperation.
Shah says it would not have surprised the researchers to find the same issues with heart and lung transplants, especially with the complication of postoperative bleeding not uncommon after complex cardiac surgery. Theoretically, surgeon fatigue could lead to careless technique, resulting in additional bleeding requiring reoperation, or it could increase the tendency to overlook surgical bleeding. But Shah and his colleagues found that the rate of reoperation was the same regardless of operative time of the day. The team also found that hospital length of stay was the same no matter what time the surgery took place.
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For the 10,545 lung transplants, roughly half were done during the day and half at night. After one year, 83.8 percent of those who got their organs during the day were still alive, compared to 82.6 percent of those who had their surgeries at night.
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Shah says his new findings are a good example of the need for more outcomes research like the current one. Without specifically looking at the question of fatigue and medical errors in heart and lung transplants, the assumption would have been that, as in many other cases, these surgeries are less safe when done at night, he says.
"It''s worth asking these questions rather than extrapolating the conclusions from other specialties," he says.
Heart and lung transplant teams could serve as a model for others, Shah says, and researchers may learn something from examining why they are so successful and using that knowledge to improve outcomes in other specialties.
Source-Newswise