期刊文献+

肌萎缩侧索硬化/运动神经元病患者胃造瘘置管术的频率、时机选择和结局:一项关于苏格兰运动神经元病记录的档案连锁研究

Frequency, timing and outcome of gastros-tomy tubes for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/motor neurone disease: A record linkage study from the Scottish Motor Neurone Disease Register
下载PDF
导出
摘要 Aims: To describe the frequency, timing and outcome from gastrostomy in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/motor neurone disease (ALS/MND).Methods: The Scottish MND Register, a population based disease register (1989- 1998), with record linkage to the Scottish Morbidity 1 dataset of hospital discharges coded for gastrostomy procedure was used. Descriptive statistics of patients undergoing gastrostomy were extracted. Survival analysis used Kaplan Meier and Cox proportional hazards methods. Results: For patients diagnosed between 1989- 98, 142 percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy(PEG) insertion episodes were identified in 1226 patients, 130 of which occurred before the censoring date of 31 December 1999. Annually, on average, 5 % of all revalent patients underwent gastrostomy, and this rate appeared to double between 1989- 98. The cumulative incidence of gastrostomy was 11 % . Mean age at PEG tube insertion was 66.8 years, with a mean disease duration of 24 months. Median survival from PEG tube insertion was 146 days. The 1 month mortality after gastrostomy was 25 % . Gastrostomy did not confer a survival advantage compared with no gastrostomy. Conclusions: We found that gastrostomy feeding tubes are being inserted more frequently in people with ALS/MND. An unexpectedly high early mortality was detected which probably reflects a lack of selection bias compared with previously published data. It is possible that changes in the practice of gastrostomy placement since 1998 result in better outcomes for patients with ALS/MND. Prospective studies are required to assess the risks and benefits of enterai nutrition in ALS/MND. Aims: To describe the frequency, timing and outcome from gastrostomy in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/motor neurone disease (ALS/MND).Methods: The Scottish MND Register, a population based disease register (1989- 1998), with record linkage to the Scottish Morbidity 1 dataset of hospital discharges coded for gastrostomy procedure was used. Descriptive statistics of patients undergoing gastrostomy were extracted. Survival analysis used Kaplan Meier and Cox proportional hazards methods. Results: For patients diagnosed between 1989- 98, 142 percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy(PEG) insertion episodes were identified in 1226 patients, 130 of which occurred before the censoring date of 31 December 1999. Annually, on average, 5 % of all revalent patients underwent gastrostomy, and this rate appeared to double between 1989- 98. The cumulative incidence of gastrostomy was 11 % . Mean age at PEG tube insertion was 66.8 years, with a mean disease duration of 24 months. Median survival from PEG tube insertion was 146 days. The 1 month mortality after gastrostomy was 25 % . Gastrostomy did not confer a survival advantage compared with no gastrostomy. Conclusions: We found that gastrostomy feeding tubes are being inserted more frequently in people with ALS/MND. An unexpectedly high early mortality was detected which probably reflects a lack of selection bias compared with previously published data. It is possible that changes in the practice of gastrostomy placement since 1998 result in better outcomes for patients with ALS/MND. Prospective studies are required to assess the risks and benefits of enterai nutrition in ALS/MND.
机构地区 Department of ogy
出处 《世界核心医学期刊文摘(神经病学分册)》 2005年第1期9-9,共1页 Digest of the World Core Medical Journals:Clinical Neurology
  • 相关文献

相关作者

内容加载中请稍等...

相关机构

内容加载中请稍等...

相关主题

内容加载中请稍等...

浏览历史

内容加载中请稍等...
;
使用帮助 返回顶部