Introduction: Late peri-operative death after ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (RAAA) repair is usually due to multiple-organ failure. The aim of this study was to identify any factors that are associated with mortality in this group of patients.
Methods: A retrospective case-note review of a single decade's operative experience of RAAA repair in a single centre. Only those patients with confirmed rupture at laparotomy were included. Sixty-three pre- intra- and post-operative variables were recorded where possible for each patient who survived surgery and the initial 24-hours post-operatively. Multi-variate analysis was performed using stepwise logistic regression. The P-POSSUM, RAAA-POSSUM, RAAA-POSSUM (physiology only), V-POSSUM, and V-POSSUM (physiology only) models were all compared to determine how each performed in these patients.
Results: Two hundred and twenty-three cases of confirmed RAAA were identified, of whom 139 survived the operation and initial 24-hours post-operatively. In-hospital mortality in this group of patients was 32.4%. Variables significantly associated with mortality after multi-variate analysis, were low intra-operative systolic blood pressure, the presence of a consultant anaesthetist at the initial operation and the development of cardiac, renal or gastro-intestinal complications. All POSSUM models except the V-POSSUM and P-POSSUM (physiology only) models demonstrated no significant lack of fit in this dataset.
Discussion: Factors associated with delayed peri-operative death after RAAA are not the same as those previously found to be associated with overall peri-operative mortality after RAAA repair.