A Novel Risk Calculator for Nonhome Discharge after Lower Extremity Bypass.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2-4-2026

Publication Title

Annals of Vascular Surgery

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nonhome discharge (NHD) after lower extremity bypass is associated with discharge delays, increased post-discharge complications, and reduced patient quality of life. Accurate risk assessment would enhance shared decision making, preoperative optimization, and discharge planning.

METHODS: Adult patients in a statewide vascular surgery registry who underwent lower extremity bypass from January 2016 to December 2023, were analyzed. The primary outcome was NHD, defined as discharge to rehabilitation, acute care facility, nursing home/extended care, hospice, assisted living, or leaving against medical advice. Two models were developed-multivariable logistic regression and XGBoost machine learning-using predictors such as age, gender, race, comorbidities, smoking status, tissue loss, procedure urgency, and length of stay. Each model was built using (a) preoperative variables only and (b) both pre- and perioperative variables, with data split into training and testing sets. Performance was compared using area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) and calibration plots.

RESULTS: Among 9,789 patients, those experiencing NHD were more likely to be older, female, Black, not currently smoking, have tissue loss, require a vein graft, present urgently or emergently, have longer hospital stay, higher frailty scores, and multiple assessed comorbidities. Model discrimination improved with perioperative variables (logistic regression AUC 0.760 to 0.855; XGBoost 0.755 to 0.854). No difference in predictive accuracy was found between model types (p=0.308). Models with only preoperative variables underpredicted risk in low-risk patients.

CONCLUSIONS: Both modeling approaches accurately predicted NHD, with perioperative data improving performance. Findings informed a risk calculator to support preoperative planning and discharge efficiency.

DOI

10.1016/j.avsg.2026.01.033

ISSN

1615-5947

PubMed ID

41651166

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