Impact of telehealth postoperative care on early outcomes following esophagectomy.

Publication date: Feb 01, 2025

To address the short-term clinical outcomes of patients postesophagectomy who underwent telehealth care following surgery. The primary objective was to compare the frequency of emergency department admission between telehealth and in-person cohorts. Secondary objectives included comparing the frequency of endoscopies and clinic visits, as well as reasons for emergency department admission. We conducted a retrospective cohort study to assess the clinical outcomes of patients who underwent esophagectomy between March 2018 and May 2022. Patients attending telehealth (phone or video call) surgical follow-up visits, largely due to the COVID-19 pandemic, were compared with a pre-COVID cohort of patients attending standard in-person care. Demographic data, clinical and disease characteristics, and hospital visit data within 6 months of operation were collected. This included surgical clinic visits, endoscopies, and emergency department admissions. There were 168 patients who underwent esophagectomy and had follow-up care between March 2018 and May 2022; 76 telehealth and 92 in-person. Patients attending telehealth appointments had significantly fewer emergency department admissions (0. 45 vs 0. 79, P = . 037) and more endoscopy visits (1. 37 vs 0. 91, P = . 020) compared with patients attending in-person visits. The number of follow-up surgical clinic visits did not differ between the groups. The most frequent reasons for emergency visits for the telehealth cohort included dysphagia, feeding-tube problems, and failure to thrive. For the in-person cohort, feeding-tube complications, inflammation/infection, and failure to thrive were the most common reasons. A program of virtual follow-up, with integrated in person visits and endoscopy as required, is feasible and safe for following patients postesophagectomy.

Concepts Keywords
Feeding Aged
Pandemic COVID pandemic
Postesophagectomy COVID-19
Emergency Service, Hospital
Esophagectomy
esophagectomy
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Postoperative Care
Postoperative Complications
Retrospective Studies
telehealth care
Telemedicine
Treatment Outcome

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH emergency
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease MESH dysphagia
disease MESH failure to thrive
disease MESH complications
disease MESH inflammation
disease MESH infection
disease MESH Postoperative Complications

Original Article

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