Hospital charge and resource use analysis of extended-spectrum penicillin antibiotic therapy after pancreatoduodenectomy in intermediate- and high-risk patients.
Publication/Presentation Date
1-1-2025
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We previously reported that an extended antibiotic mitigation pathway following pancreatoduodenectomy in patients with intermediate-/high-risk glands is associated with 83 % lower odds of clinically relevant postoperative pancreatic fistula (CR-POPF). We now describe associations between the pathway, resource utilization, and hospital charges.
METHODS: We performed a retrospective cohort study of patients who underwent elective pancreatoduodenectomy with soft gland texture and fistula risk score (FRS) ≥3 who received standard or extended antibiotics. Hospital charges and resource utilization within 90 days of surgery were compared by CR-POPF status and antibiotic pathway.
RESULTS: A total of 34 patients received extended antibiotics and 53 received standard antibiotics. In patients with CR-POPF, patients who received extended antibiotics had lower likelihood of surgical or percutaneous reintervention (75.0 % vs. 100.0 %, p = 0.022). Ninety-day postoperative charges associated with CR-POPF were higher than no CR-POPF ($60,527 vs. $25,631, p = 0.028). Our risk-based model predicted a $15,825 decrease in hospital charges per patient receiving extended antibiotics.
CONCLUSIONS: CR-POPF is associated with higher 90-day hospital charges. Extended antibiotic therapy following pancreatoduodenectomy in patients with soft gland texture and FRS ≥3 is associated with fewer reinterventions in patients who develop CR-POPF. These outcomes will be formally tested in a randomized controlled trial (NCT05753735).
Volume
27
Issue
1
First Page
63
Last Page
70
ISSN
1477-2574
Published In/Presented At
Loftus, A., Wu, V. S., Elshami, M., Hue, J. J., & Ocuin, L. M. (2025). Hospital charge and resource use analysis of extended-spectrum penicillin antibiotic therapy after pancreatoduodenectomy in intermediate- and high-risk patients. HPB : the official journal of the International Hepato Pancreato Biliary Association, 27(1), 63–70. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hpb.2024.09.011
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
39424467
Department(s)
Department of Surgery, Lehigh Valley Topper Cancer Institute
Document Type
Article