Perioperative outcomes in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients – the PRO HIV study

It is estimated that a quarter of patients with HIV/AIDS undergo at least one surgical procedure in their life time. Surgical outcomes in these patients from developing countries are poorly characterized and surgeons are often concerned about poor surgical outcomes, especially when their CD4 cell counts are less than 200 cells/µl. This study evaluated the surgical outcomes of HIV-infected patients undergoing various surgical procedures over a six-year period in a large tertiary care hospital from South India. Two hundred and ninety-three patients underwent 374 surgical procedures during the study period. The median duration of HIV prior to surgery was 1.9 years (range 0–18.8 years). Two-thirds (58%) were on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) at the time of surgery with the median duration of this treatment being 38 months (n = 194). About one-third (35%) of surgical procedures were performed as an emergency. Abdomino-pelvic surgeries were the most common (225, 60%). Adverse surgical outcome defined as death or post-operative infection was seen in 25 (6.6%). The post-operative infection rate was 5% (20/374). The most common of these was surgical site infection observed in nine (60%) followed by pneumonia in five patients (33%) and urinary tract infection in one patient. Day 30 mortality was 2% (n = 8) and a quarter of these were reported to be related to post-operative infectious complications. On multivariate analysis, only preoperative haemoglobin of less than 10 g/dl was significantly associated with a poor surgical outcome. HIV-related parameters such as CD4 cell counts, duration of HIV infection and HAART regimen did not seem to contribute towards an adverse surgical outcome.

[1]  Kenneth R. Bischof,et al.  Perioperative patient outcomes in the African Surgical Outcomes Study: a 7-day prospective observational cohort study. , 2018, Lancet.

[2]  B. Sartorius,et al.  The effect of HIV status on clinical outcomes of surgical sepsis in KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa. , 2017, South African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde.

[3]  S. Crystal,et al.  Thirty-day postoperative mortality among individuals with HIV infection receiving antiretroviral therapy and procedure-matched, uninfected comparators. , 2015, JAMA surgery.

[4]  J. Atashili,et al.  CD4 Count is Still a Valid Indicator of Outcome in HIV-Infected Patients Undergoing Major Abdominal Surgery in the Era of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy , 2015, World Journal of Surgery.

[5]  J. Chikwe,et al.  Changing prevalence, profile, and outcomes of patients with HIV undergoing cardiac surgery in the United States. , 2014, American heart journal.

[6]  A. Patassi,et al.  Risk Factors for Surgical Wound Infection in HIV-Positive Patients Undergoing Surgery for Orthopaedic Trauma , 2010, Journal of orthopaedic surgery.

[7]  K. Novák,et al.  Surgery-related death, complicated wounds, and anastomosis healing in HIV-positive patients with considerable immune deficit: assumption and reality. , 2009, International surgery.

[8]  R. S. Dua,et al.  Impact of HIV and AIDS on surgical practice. , 2007, Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

[9]  L. Hurley,et al.  Surgical outcomes in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients in the era of highly active antiretroviral therapy. , 2006, Archives of surgery.

[10]  D. Adams,et al.  Excellent outcomes of cardiac surgery in patients infected with HIV in the current era. , 2006, Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

[11]  J. Lambert,et al.  Complications according to mode of delivery among human immunodeficiency virus-infected women with CD4 lymphocyte counts of < or = 500/microL. , 2000, American journal of obstetrics and gynecology.

[12]  O. Dathe,et al.  Complications after caesarean section in HIV-1-infected women not taking antiretroviral treatment , 1999, The Lancet.

[13]  B. Gazzard,et al.  Increased Risk of Wound Complications and Poor Healing following Laparotomy in HIV-Seropositive and AIDS Patients , 1999, Digestive Surgery.

[14]  C. Steffes,et al.  CD4 cell counts as a prognostic factor of major abdominal surgery in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus. , 1998, Archives of surgery.

[15]  R. Lord Anorectal surgery in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus: factors associated with delayed wound healing. , 1997, Annals of surgery.

[16]  G. Pardi,et al.  The incidence of complications after caesarean section in 156 HIV‐positive women , 1995, AIDS.

[17]  M. Yii,et al.  Abdominal surgery in HIV/AIDS patients: indications, operative management, pathology and outcome. , 1995, The Australian and New Zealand journal of surgery.

[18]  Naho HIV/AIDS – A fact sheet , 2009 .

[19]  S. Thomson,et al.  Prevalence of HIV status and CD4 counts in a surgical cohort: their relationship to clinical outcome. , 2006, Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.