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Perirenal fat surface area as a risk factor for perioperative difficulties and 30-day postoperative complications in elective colon cancer surgery.

Colorectal Disease 2018 December
AIM: Visceral obesity is associated with perioperative and postoperative complications in colorectal surgery. We aimed to investigate the association between the perirenal fat surface area (PRF) and postoperative complications.

METHOD: Data on 610 patients undergoing curative, elective colon cancer resection between 2006 and 2016 at Stockholm South General Hospital were retrieved from a local quality register. We assessed perioperative and postoperative outcomes using a multinomial regression model adjusted for age, sex, American Society of Anesthesiologists classification and surgical approach (open/laparoscopy) in relation to PRF.

RESULTS: PRF could be measured in 605 patients; the median area was 24 cm2 . Patients with PRF ≥ 40 cm2 had longer operation time (median 223 vs 184 min), more intra-operative bleeding (250 vs 125 ml), reoperations (11% vs 6%), surgical complications (27% vs 13%) and nonsurgical infectious complications (16% vs 9%) than patients with PRF < 40 cm2 , but there were no differences in the need for intensive care or duration of hospital stay. The multivariate analyses revealed an increased risk of any complication [OR 1.68 (95% CI 1.1-2.6)], which was even more pronounced for moderate complications [Clavien-Dindo II, OR 2.14 (CI 1.2-2.4]; Clavien-Dindo III, OR 2.35 (CI 1.0-5.5)] in patients with PRF ≥ 40 vs < 40 cm2 . The absolute risk of complications was similar in men and women with PRF ≥ 40 cm2 .

CONCLUSION: PRF, an easily measured indirect marker of visceral obesity, was associated with overall and moderate complications in men and women and could serve as a useful tool in the assessment of preoperative risk.

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