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Association of postoperative delirium with cognitive outcomes: A meta-analysis
Association of postoperative delirium with cognitive outcomes: A meta-analysis
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Association of postoperative delirium with cognitive outcomes: A meta-analysis
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Association of postoperative delirium with cognitive outcomes: A meta-analysis
Association of postoperative delirium with cognitive outcomes: A meta-analysis

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Association of postoperative delirium with cognitive outcomes: A meta-analysis
Association of postoperative delirium with cognitive outcomes: A meta-analysis
Journal Article

Association of postoperative delirium with cognitive outcomes: A meta-analysis

2021
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Overview
To determine the association between postoperative delirium (POD) and cognitive outcomes at least 1 month after surgery in elderly patients, and synthesize the dynamic risk trajectory of cognition impairment after POD. Meta-analysis searching PubMed, Cochrane and EMBASE from inception to November 1, 2020. The terms postoperative delirium, delirium after surgery, postsurgical delirium, postoperative cogniti*, postoperative cognitive dysfunction, postoperative cognition decline, cognitive decline, cognitive impair* and dement* were searched alone or in combination. Inclusion criteria were prospective cohort studies investigating the association between POD and cognitive outcomes in patients aged ≥60 years underwent surgery. The primary outcome was the association between POD and cognitive outcomes at 1 or more months after surgery. We considered cognitive outcomes measured up to 12 months after surgery as short-term and beyond 12 months as long-term. Two authors performed the study screening, data extraction and quality assessments. Effect sizes were calculated as Hedges g or Odds ratio (OR) based on random- and fixed-effects models. Meta-regression was conducted to analyze the role of potential contributors to heterogeneity. Eighteen studies were included. Our result showed a significant and medium association between POD and cognitive outcomes after at least 1 month postoperatively (g = 0.61 95% CI 0.43–0.79; I2 = 65.1%), indicating that patients with POD were associated with worse cognitive outcomes. The association of POD with short- and long-term cognitive impairment were also both significant (short-term: g = 0.46 95% CI 0.24–0.68; I2 = 53.1%; and long-term: g = 0.82 95% CI 0.57–1.06; I2 = 57.1%). A multivariate meta-regression suggested that age and measure of delirium were significant sources of heterogeneity. POD was also associated with the significant risk for dementia (OR = 6.08 95% CI 3.80–9.72; I2 = 0) as well as attention (OR = 1.74 95% CI 1.13–2.68; I2 = 0), executive (OR = 1.33 95% CI 1.00–1.80; I2 = 0) and memory impairment (OR = 1.59 95% CI 1.20–2.10; I2 = 43.0%). Additionally, our results showed that the risk trajectory for cognitive decline associated with POD within five years after surgery revealed exponential growth. This is the first meta-analysis quantifying the association between POD and cognitive outcomes. Our results showed that POD was significantly associated with worse cognitive outcomes, including short- and long-term cognitive outcomes following surgery. •POD was significantly associated with worse short- and long-term cognitive outcomes.•POD was associated with dementia as well as attention, execution and memory damage.•The relation between POD and cognitive impairment was time- and dose-dependent.