Validation of Emergency Surgery Score (ESS) as outcome prediction score in Egyptian patients undergoing emergency laparotomy
Mina Montasser, Doaa Ahmed Mohamed Ellisy, Jehan Ahmed Sayed, Momen Mostafa Makkey

TL;DR
This study validates the Emergency Surgery Score (ESS) in predicting outcomes for Egyptian patients undergoing emergency laparotomy.
Contribution
The study confirms the ESS's predictive validity in an Egyptian population for 30-day mortality and complications.
Findings
Higher ESS scores were significantly associated with increased mortality and complication rates.
The 30-day mortality rate was 28%, with pneumonia being the most common complication.
ESS effectively categorized patients at higher risk for complications.
Abstract
Emergency laparotomy is an exploratory procedure for many surgical situations. Proper prognostic prediction helps recognize high-risk patients who benefit from further therapy. The Emergency Surgery Score (ESS) was developed as a preoperative risk evaluation assessment that predicts patient outcomes after emergency laparotomy. This study is to validate the ESS in Egyptian patients by evaluating its predictive ability for 30-day mortality, surgical complications, and ICU admission rates. This prospective observational cohort study was performed out from May 2022 to November 2023 at two tertiary centers in Egypt. Patients aged 18 and above undergoing emergency laparotomy were included, whereas pregnant women and individuals with vascular or gynecological indications were eliminated. Preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative data were thoroughly collected, and ESS was calculated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes · Hip and Femur Fractures · Pelvic and Acetabular Injuries
