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The Relationship between the Duration of Surgery for Thoracoscopic Lobectomy and Postoperative Complications in Patients with Stage I Non-small Cell Lung Cancer.

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between the duration of surgery for thoracoscopic lobectomy and postoperative complications in patients with stage I non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

METHODS: The clinical data of patients who underwent thoracoscopic lobectomy in the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Shaoxing Central Hospital from September 2018 to September 2023 were retrospectively analyzed.

RESULTS: A total of 263 patients with thoracoscopic lobectomy were enrolled in this study. The duration of surgery was longer for patients with postoperative hospital stay >7 days, atrial fibrillation, postoperative pulmonary air leakage (>5 days), pleural effusion, or pneumonia compared to patients without corresponding complications, and the differences were statistically significant. Further regression analysis showed that prolonged duration of surgery was a risk factor for pneumonia, pleural effusion, atrial fibrillation, and postoperative hospital stay >7 days, and the predictive value of prolonged duration of surgery for the above complications was moderate. The results of chi-square tests showed that pneumonia, atelectasis, urinary tract infection, liver dysfunction, postoperative pulmonary air leakage (>5 days), pleural effusion, and atrial fibrillation were associated with postoperative hospital stay >7 days.

CONCLUSION: Prolonged duration of surgery is a risk factor for complications such as pneumonia, pleural effusion, atrial fibrillation, and postoperative hospital stay >7 days.

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