National analysis suggests that potentially serious complications occur in 1 in 18 procedures under the care of an anaesthetist
Risk factors associated with complications in anaesthesia include very young age; comorbidities; being male; increased frailty; the urgency and extent of surgery; and surgery taking place at night and/or at weekends
Thursday 9 November 2023
New survey data from the 7th National Audit Project of the Royal College of Anaesthetists (NAP7) published in Anaesthesia (a journal of the Association of Anaesthetists) shows that potentially serious complications occur in one in 18 procedures under the care of an anaesthetist.
The risk factors associated with these potentially serious complications include very young age (babies); comorbidities; being male; increased frailty; the urgency and extent of surgery; and surgery taking place at night and/or at weekends.
This paper has been produced by a team of authors across UK hospitals including; Dr Andrew Kane, Consultant in Anaesthesia, James Cook University Hospital, Middlesbrough and Fellow, Health Services Research Centre, Royal College of Anaesthetists, London, UK; Dr Jasmeet Soar, Consultant in Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Southmead Hospital, North Bristol NHS Trust, Bristol, UK; and Professor Tim Cook, Consultant in Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust, Bath, UK, and Honorary Professor, School of Medicine, University of Bristol.
Complications and critical incidents during anaesthesia, arising due to patient, surgical or anaesthetic factors, may cause harm themselves or progress to more severe events, including cardiac arrest or death. As part of the Royal College of Anaesthetists' 7th National Audit Project, which focuses on peri-operative cardiac arrest, the authors studied a prospective national cohort of unselected patients.
Anaesthetists recorded anonymous details of all cases undertaken over four days at their site through an online survey. Of 416 hospital sites invited to participate, 352 (85%) completed the study. Obstetric cases were analysed separately and will be the focus of a separate paper later. Of 20,996 non-obstetric cases, 1,705 potentially serious complications were reported during 1,150 (5.5%) cases. Circulatory events (such as severely low blood pressure or abnormalities of heart rate and rhythm) accounted for most of these complications [616 (36%)], followed by airway complications (e.g. low oxygen levels) [418 (25%)], metabolic [264 (15%)], breathing (e.g. difficulty in ventilating the lungs) [259 (15%)], ‘other’ [107 (6%)] and neurological [41 (2%)] events. A single complication was reported in 851 (4%) of total cases, two complications in 166 (1%), and three or more complications in 133 (1%).
In elective surgery, all complications were ‘uncommon’ (1-10 per 1000 cases) or even less frequent. Emergency (urgent and immediate priority) surgery accounted for 3454 (16%) included cases but 714 (42%) complications with severe low blood pressure (hypotension), major bleeding, severe alterations in heart rhythm (arrhythmias), septic shock, significant acidosis, and electrolyte (mineral) disturbances all being ‘common’ (10-100 per 1000 cases).
Complications were associated with very young age (less than 1 year); higher comorbidity as assessed by the American Society of Anesthesiology (ASA) physical status; male sex; increased frailty; urgency and extent of surgery; day of the week (higher risk at weekends); and time of day.
"Patients have become older, more comorbid and more often obese than a decade ago. All these factors, combined with the complications we report today, make undergoing anaesthesia and surgery intrinsically more hazardous."
The estimated risk of complications as follows:
Lines with * are the most prominent effects - neonates, high ASA (‘serious underlying medical issues’), emergency surgery (e.g. bleeding from trauma), operations at night (nearly all emergencies)
*New-born babies (age less than 28 days) (18%) 3.8 times higher than young adults (19-25y, 4.7%)
Older adults compared with younger adults (19-25y, 4.7%): Adults aged 66-75 y – 6.0%, 28% higher risk
Adults aged 76-85 y – 6.1%, 30% higher risk
Adults aged over 85 y - 5.7%, 21% higher risk
*ASA1 (fit and healthy, 3.5%) v ASA 4 (patient with major medical conditions e.g. heart or lung disease, 19%), 5.5 times increased risk for ASA 4 patients
Males (6.4%) v females (4.7%), 40% higher risk for males
Frail (e.g. needing help with daily activities such as cooking, shopping and housework 8.5%) vs. non-frail (4.5%), double the risk for patients who are frail
*Emergency (‘urgent surgery’ 8.8%, ‘immediate surgery’ 39%) vs. elective (4%): immediate surgery 10 times risk as elective, and 4 times the risk of urgent (see notes to editor)
Minor surgery (e.g. skin lump removal, 3.4%) vs. complex major surgery (e.g. bowel resection for cancer, 9%) 2.5 times increased risk for complex major surgery
Weekday (~5%) vs. weekend (Sat 6.5%, Sun 10%) thus increased risk of 30% for Saturday vs. weekday and double risk for Sunday vs.weekday
*Night-time surgery (20%) versus daytime (5%) – 4 times increased risk for night-time vs. daytime
Importantly, the above comparisons are univariate (comparing only one factor) and factors interact. For instance, at weekends and nighttime only the most urgent cases are operated on, often being in elderly, frail and unwell patients. It maybe these factors in combination are the cause of increased complications at this time. Similarly almost all neonatal surgery is urgent and major in babies who are unwell which in part accounts for the higher rate for complications.
Dr Kane says: “These new data from the NAP7 Activity Survey present the first estimates for the rates of potentially serious complications and critical incidents observed during modern anaesthetic practice. The data confirm that during elective practice, individual complications are uncommon, and this is reassuring for patients, surgeons and anaesthetists. Conversely, the data also highlight the relatively higher rate of complications in emergency settings.”
Prof Cook adds “The data show the potentially serious consequences occur frequently during anaesthesia and these may arise from patient, surgery or anaesthetic causes. Almost all anaesthesia care in the UK is provided by highly trained doctors and the data show that although anaesthesia is not a risk-free undertaking, the care delivered by the anaesthesia and surgical team means very few of these events progress to patient harm and anaesthesia remains very safe.”
Dr Soar concludes: “As part of the same project we recently reported that patients have become older, more comorbid and more often obese than a decade ago. All these factors, combined with the complications we report today, make undergoing anaesthesia and surgery intrinsically more hazardous. Our findings are likely to be of value for risk assessment and consent.”
Dr Fiona Donald, President of the Royal College of Anaesthetists, said: “Anaesthesia remains very safe and anaesthetists along with the whole surgical team are doing a good job of managing complications when they arise. But the more we understand about which patients are at greater risk of complications and the reasons for that, the better equipped we are to make further improvements in perioperative care and this study takes us a long way along that road of understanding.”