Many doctors worry that older patients or those with other health issues are too risky for major surgery. This concern often stops people from getting life-saving treatments. A new look at data from a large trial challenges that fear. Researchers analyzed 245 adults who had minimally invasive esophagectomy for esophageal cancer. This surgery removes part of the esophagus using small incisions and cameras. The team tracked how often patients faced severe complications, defined as serious issues requiring major intervention or hospital stay. They also looked at how long patients stayed in the hospital or intensive care unit. The results were clear. Thirty-five point five percent of all patients had severe complications. This rate did not rise for older patients. Those aged 75 and older had a low rate of severe issues. Patients with higher scores for general health problems also did not face higher risks. Even those with multiple existing conditions remained safe. The study suggests that age and illness alone should not rule out surgery. Doctors can consider these patients for the procedure if they follow current safety guidelines. However, the analysis had limits. The group of frail patients was very small. This made it hard to draw firm conclusions about the safest surgery for the most vulnerable patients. Follow-up time was not reported either. While this study offers hope, it is based on secondary analysis of an RCT. Associations were found, but causation was not proven. Still, the message is strong. Older patients can be safe candidates for this operation.
Age and comorbidity do not raise severe complication risk after minimally invasive esophagectomyOlder esophageal cancer patients face no higher risk of severe complications with minimally invasive surgery
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This secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial examined 245 adults with esophageal cancer who underwent minimally invasive esophagectomy (MIE). The primary outcome was severe complications, defined as Clavien-Dindo grade ≥3a. Researchers compared complication rates across age groups, ASA scores, and comorbidity indices to assess surgical risk in older or sicker patients.
Overall, 87 patients (35.5%) experienced severe complications. However, multivariable analysis showed no significant association between severe complications and age ≥75 years, ASA score ≥3, or CCI ≥2. The median CIRS-G score was 3, and frailty analysis was limited due to only 14 frail patients (5.7%).
Secondary outcomes included hospital and ICU length of stay, overall complications, and readmissions, though specific results were not detailed. The study was multicenter, but follow-up duration was not reported.
Limitations include the observational nature of the analysis, limited frailty data, and lack of reported effect sizes or confidence intervals. The findings suggest that age and comorbidity alone should not exclude patients from MIE when selected per clinical practice, but causation cannot be inferred.