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The influence of age on operative mortality and long-term relative survival following emergency abdominal aortic aneurysm operations

European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery(1995)

Cited 22|Views4
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Abstract
Objective: To study operative mortality and long-term survival following emerg Design: Retrospective survey in a university hospital. Materials: Two hundred and twenty-seven patients with median age 72 years, (17% women). Methods: Founded on data from the Norwegian Registrar's Office, operative mortality and long-term survival was estimated using the life-table method. Expected survival for demographically matched subgroups was calculated from deathrate tables issued by the Norwegian Central Bureau of Statistics. Results: Operative mortality was 41% for the 175 patients with ruptured aneurysms and 17% for the 52 with imminent rupture. The 6-year survival rate was 61% for all the successfully operated patients, and not different from that of a demographically matched population. For the patients of 72 years or older the 6-year survival rate was 53%. This was equal to that of an age and sex matched population. The younger patients had an observed 6-year survival rate of 64%, which was significantly lower than the expected of 84%. The standard mortality rate for this group was 2.25. No statistically significant difference in long-term survival was detected between the two age groups. Conclusions: Age at the time of the operation for a symptomatic abdominal aortic aneurysm does not seem to influence long-term survival. Consequently, younger patients experience a higher relative mortality compared to the older.
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Key words
Abdominal aortic aneurysm,Rupture,Surgical repair,Mortality,Survival,Age
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