Determinants of outcomes following surgery for type A acute aortic dissection: the UK National Adult Cardiac Surgical Audit
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Operability of type A acute aortic dissections (TAAAD) is currently based on non-standardized decision-making process, and it lacks a disease-specific risk evaluation model that can predict mortality. We investigated patient, intraoperative data, surgeon, and centre-related variables for patients who underwent TAAAD in the UK.
We identified 4203 patients undergoing TAAAD surgery in the UK (2009–18), who were enrolled into the UK National Adult Cardiac Surgical Audit dataset. The primary outcome was operative mortality. A multivariable logistic regression analysis was performed with fast backward elimination of variables and the bootstrap-based optimism-correction was adopted to assess model performance. Variation related to hospital or surgeon effects were quantified by a generalized mixed linear model and risk-adjusted funnel plots by displaying the individual standardized mortality ratio against expected deaths. Final variables retained in the model were: age [odds ratio (OR) 1.02, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.02–1.03;
Patient characteristics, intraoperative factors, cardiac centre, and high-volume surgeons are strong determinants of outcomes following TAAAD surgery. These findings may help refining clinical decision-making, supporting patient counselling and be used by policy makers for quality assurance and service provision improvement.
Contributors

Arnaldo Dimagli
Author

Amit Kaura
Author

Shubhra Sinha
Author

Giovanni Mariscalco
Author

George Krasopoulos
Author

Narain Moorjani
Author

Mark Field
Author

Trivedi Uday
Author

Simon Kendal
Author

Graham Cooper
Author

Rakesh Uppal
Author

Haris Bilal
Author

Jorge Mascaro
Author

Andrew Goodwin
Author

Gianni Angelini
Author

Geoffry Tsang
Author

Enoch Akowuah
Author

