Background Diabetes is a significant and prevalent medical condition associated with increased comorbidities, longer hospital length of stay, and higher healthcare costs. We aimed to assess the association between diabetes… Click to show full abstract
Background Diabetes is a significant and prevalent medical condition associated with increased comorbidities, longer hospital length of stay, and higher healthcare costs. We aimed to assess the association between diabetes mellitus and postoperative outcomes following pancreatic surgeries. Methods Records for patients with major elective pancreatic surgeries were retrieved retrospectively from the Nationwide Readmission Database (2010-2014). Association of diabetic status with postoperative complications, in-hospital mortality, length of stay (LOS), readmission rate, and hospital costs were investigated. Logistic regression and decision tree analyses were employed to predict adverse outcomes. Results A total of 8,401 patients who had pancreatic surgery were included. They were categorized according to their diabetic diagnosis. Results showed that diabetic patients had a higher risk of postoperative complications compared to non-diabetics (OR: 1.27, 95% CI: 1.08-1.49, P=0.003). Bleeding and renal complications were the most significant. Uncontrolled diabetes significantly required a longer hospital stay (9.17±4.28 vs. 8.03±4.96 days, P=0.001), and incurred higher hospital costs ($34,171.04±$20,846.61 vs. $28,182.21±$24,070.27, P=0.001). After multivariate regression, no association was found with in-hospital mortality or readmission rates; however, diabetic patients' length of stay during readmission was increased at 30- and 90-day readmissions (P=0.004 and 0.007, respectively). Conclusions Among patients who underwent pancreatic surgery, those with diabetes had a higher rate of postoperative complications compared to non-diabetics. Additionally, diabetic patients had higher hospital charges and costs during primary admission. Initial analysis of patients with diabetes showed they had higher rates of 30- and 90-day readmissions, though this did not maintain significance after regression analysis. Exploring the mechanisms underlying this finding would aid in preventing postoperative complications and reducing healthcare costs.
               
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