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Data mining to evaluate mortality after amputation surgery

Abstract

Background

The objective of amputation and disarticulation is to improve health. However, these treatments are associated with significant mortality rates that vary in relation to risk factors.

Objective

To identify associations between determinants of postoperative mortality after amputation surgery.

Methods

Case-control study (death vs. no death) considering data from 173 patients who underwent amputation surgery at a public hospital in Santa Catarina state, Brazil. These data were analyzed using a data mining approach to discover association rules and epidemiologic association metrics.

Results

The main determinants were age > 60 years (odds ratio (OR) = 3.0), female sex (OR = 2.0), low education, hypertension (OR = 3.0), diabetes (OR = 1.6), and smoking (OR = 1.8). Among patients aged 60-69 years, 87.9% survived to discharge from hospital. The exceptions occurred when patients in this age range had peripheral vascular disease. The same was true when age was > 70 years, among whom diagnoses of embolism and thrombosis of arteries of the lower extremities were the exception factors (associated with death). The most common pathologies associated with death were vascular disease (47.0%) and diabetes (29.4%), heart disease (relative risk = 11.4), renal disease (OR = 10.4), and lung disease (OR = 5.2). Proximal surgeries were more strongly associated with death than distal ones. Among the deaths, 76.0% had been given spinal anesthesia and 24.0% general anesthesia.

Conclusion

Data mining enabled identification of associations between death and a variety of different variables and diagnostic hypotheses; for example, age > 70 years and diagnosis of embolism and thrombosis of arteries of the lower extremities.

Keywords:
amputation; mortality; data mining

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