2021
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-98563-y
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Hospitalization outcomes among brain metastasis patients receiving radiation therapy with or without stereotactic radiosurgery from the 2005–2014 Nationwide Inpatient Sample

Abstract: The purpose of this study was to compare hospitalization outcomes among US inpatients with brain metastases who received stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) and/or non-SRS radiation therapies without neurosurgical intervention. A cross-sectional study was conducted whereby existing data on 35,199 hospitalization records (non-SRS alone: 32,981; SRS alone: 1035; SRS + non-SRS: 1183) from 2005 to 2014 Nationwide Inpatient Sample were analyzed. Targeted maximum likelihood estimation and Super Learner algorithms were a… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…This may be due to the fact that previous study has suggested that more selective use of PACs may translate to improved outcomes by targeting high-risk patients (i.e., CHF, pulmonary artery hypertension [PAH]) or high-risk procedures (i.e., multiple valve operations, durable left ventricular assist device [LVAD] implantation) [7,8,9 ▪▪ ]. Interestingly, a recently published study of the National Inpatient Sample, which analyzed the outcomes associated with a subgroup of more than 320 000 cardiac surgical records of patients with CHF, PAH, mitral/tricuspid disease or combined surgeries, found that after risk adjustment, although patients with PACs experienced slightly shorter LOS, in-hospital deaths were similar regardless of PAC use [10 ▪▪ ]. PAC use varied as much by the institution as the patient or surgery subgroup, further illustrating the degree to which PAC use is influenced as much by local resources and culture as it is by clinical indication.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This may be due to the fact that previous study has suggested that more selective use of PACs may translate to improved outcomes by targeting high-risk patients (i.e., CHF, pulmonary artery hypertension [PAH]) or high-risk procedures (i.e., multiple valve operations, durable left ventricular assist device [LVAD] implantation) [7,8,9 ▪▪ ]. Interestingly, a recently published study of the National Inpatient Sample, which analyzed the outcomes associated with a subgroup of more than 320 000 cardiac surgical records of patients with CHF, PAH, mitral/tricuspid disease or combined surgeries, found that after risk adjustment, although patients with PACs experienced slightly shorter LOS, in-hospital deaths were similar regardless of PAC use [10 ▪▪ ]. PAC use varied as much by the institution as the patient or surgery subgroup, further illustrating the degree to which PAC use is influenced as much by local resources and culture as it is by clinical indication.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%