Improving Outcomes in Urological Surgery for the Elderly: Strategies for Optimization and Risk Reduction
Patrick Juliebø-Jones, Christian Beisland

TL;DR
This paper discusses ways to improve surgical outcomes for elderly patients undergoing urological surgery by using better risk assessment tools and individualized approaches.
Contribution
The paper highlights the need for better risk profiling tools and individualized treatment strategies for elderly urological surgery patients.
Findings
Most urological surgery patients are elderly, but trials in this group are lacking due to factors like cognitive impairment.
Clinicians often underestimate 10-year survival in elderly patients, affecting treatment decisions.
Prospective studies are needed to monitor outcomes in elderly patients who do not undergo surgery.
Abstract
The purpose was to present latest findings on factors that can help improve risk profiling for surgery in the elderly and thus improve outcomes. Approximately two thirds of patients undergoing urological surgery are elderly. A number of assessment tools are now available for clinical application to facilitate risk planning when considering surgery. There is an overall lack of trials performed in the elderly on account of a number of factors including cognitive impairment, mobility and perceived lack of benefit. Clinicians are generally poor at estimating 10-year survival in patients and usually underestimate it. Treatment success in this demographic varies from the index patient and an individualised approach should be taken. It is of increasing relevance for clinicians to familiarize themselves with tools that can facilitate surgical care in the elderly. Prospective studies are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare cost, quality, practices · Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life · Frailty in Older Adults
