Background: Grading surgical complications and sequelae is of paramount importance for analyzing results and improving patient care and system performance and in optimizing resource allocation and use. Existing systems for surgical complication classification do not consistently account for baseline physiologic vulnerability and often conflate treatment intensity with clinical severity. This limitation reduces interpretability across diverse patient populations, particularly in emergency and elective general surgery. Methods: A multidisciplinary expert panel conducted a modified Delphi process to develop a dual-axis classification system, the Extended Postoperative Complication Score (EPCS). This system stratifies patients preoperatively into three baseline classes (A, B, C) reflecting physiologic reserve and immunocompetence. Postoperative events are then graded by physiologic impact from Grade 0 (minor, no impact) to Grade IV (death). Sequelae, defined as anticipated events related to underlying pathology or chronic disease, are separately categorized. Representatives of the most relevant international emergency and trauma surgical associations were involved (World Society of Emergency Surgery, European Society for Trauma and Emergency Surgery, American Association for the Surgery of Trauma, Panamerican Trauma Society, EndoVascular and Trauma Management Society, Global Alliance for Infections in Surgery). Results: The EPCS yields 18 mutually exclusive strata, combining five complication grades and three baseline classes, plus three sequelae codes. The matrix enables interpretable outcome reporting across settings, accounting for both event severity and host vulnerability. Expert consensus confirmed conceptual clarity and operational feasibility. The system allows applications to elective, urgent, and emergent operations, and is compatible with clinical audit, observational research, and pragmatic trials. Conclusions: The EPCS provides a structured, physiologically anchored method for postoperative complication stratification. Its dual-axis design may improve the validity of outcome comparisons and support real-world evaluation of surgical quality. Further validation is warranted through prospective multicenter implementation and time-bound observational methodologies. ( J Trauma Acute Care Surg . 2026;100:700-706. Copyright © 2026 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma.).
The extended postoperative complication score: A dual-axis reporting plan for general surgery
Federico Coccolini;Enrico Cicuttin;Camilla Cremonini;Andrea Colli;Laura Besola;
2026-01-01
Abstract
Background: Grading surgical complications and sequelae is of paramount importance for analyzing results and improving patient care and system performance and in optimizing resource allocation and use. Existing systems for surgical complication classification do not consistently account for baseline physiologic vulnerability and often conflate treatment intensity with clinical severity. This limitation reduces interpretability across diverse patient populations, particularly in emergency and elective general surgery. Methods: A multidisciplinary expert panel conducted a modified Delphi process to develop a dual-axis classification system, the Extended Postoperative Complication Score (EPCS). This system stratifies patients preoperatively into three baseline classes (A, B, C) reflecting physiologic reserve and immunocompetence. Postoperative events are then graded by physiologic impact from Grade 0 (minor, no impact) to Grade IV (death). Sequelae, defined as anticipated events related to underlying pathology or chronic disease, are separately categorized. Representatives of the most relevant international emergency and trauma surgical associations were involved (World Society of Emergency Surgery, European Society for Trauma and Emergency Surgery, American Association for the Surgery of Trauma, Panamerican Trauma Society, EndoVascular and Trauma Management Society, Global Alliance for Infections in Surgery). Results: The EPCS yields 18 mutually exclusive strata, combining five complication grades and three baseline classes, plus three sequelae codes. The matrix enables interpretable outcome reporting across settings, accounting for both event severity and host vulnerability. Expert consensus confirmed conceptual clarity and operational feasibility. The system allows applications to elective, urgent, and emergent operations, and is compatible with clinical audit, observational research, and pragmatic trials. Conclusions: The EPCS provides a structured, physiologically anchored method for postoperative complication stratification. Its dual-axis design may improve the validity of outcome comparisons and support real-world evaluation of surgical quality. Further validation is warranted through prospective multicenter implementation and time-bound observational methodologies. ( J Trauma Acute Care Surg . 2026;100:700-706. Copyright © 2026 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma.).I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


