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    Subjects/Surgery/Cardiothoracic Vascular Surgery
    Cardiothoracic Vascular Surgery
    medium
    scissors Surgery

    Which of the following is not a component of Thoracoscore?

    A. Complication of surgery
    B. ASA grading
    C. Performance status
    D. Priority of surgery

    Explanation

    ## Correct Answer: A. Complication of surgery Thoracoscore is a validated risk stratification tool used to predict in-hospital mortality in thoracic surgery patients, particularly those undergoing major pulmonary resection. It was developed by Falcoz et al. and incorporates specific preoperative and operative variables that independently predict outcome. The key discriminator is that Thoracoscore does NOT include "complication of surgery" as a component—it is a *preoperative* risk assessment tool designed to predict the likelihood of complications and mortality *before* surgery occurs. Including postoperative complications would be circular logic and defeat the purpose of preoperative risk stratification. The actual components of Thoracoscore are: (1) ASA (American Society of Anesthesiologists) grading, (2) Performance status (ECOG or Karnofsky), (3) Priority of surgery (elective vs. emergency), (4) Extent of resection, (5) Comorbidities (age, FEV1, diffusion capacity), and (6) Thoracic comorbidity. In Indian thoracic surgery practice, Thoracoscore is increasingly used in tertiary centers to counsel patients preoperatively and guide surgical decision-making, particularly in high-risk populations with tuberculosis sequelae and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. ## Why the other options are wrong **B. ASA grading** — ASA (American Society of Anesthesiologists) grading is a *core component* of Thoracoscore. It stratifies patients by systemic health status (I–V) and is one of the strongest independent predictors of perioperative morbidity and mortality. This is explicitly included in the Thoracoscore formula and is essential for risk calculation. **C. Performance status** — Performance status (ECOG 0–4 or Karnofsky score) is a mandatory component of Thoracoscore. It reflects the patient's functional capacity and ability to tolerate major surgery. Poor performance status significantly increases predicted mortality and is weighted heavily in the risk model. **D. Priority of surgery** — Priority of surgery (elective vs. urgent/emergency) is a documented component of Thoracoscore. Emergency procedures carry substantially higher mortality risk than elective ones. This variable captures the acuity of presentation and is included in the validated scoring system. ## High-Yield Facts - **Thoracoscore** is a preoperative risk calculator for thoracic surgery, NOT a postoperative complication grading tool. - **ASA grading, performance status, and priority of surgery** are three of the six main components of Thoracoscore. - **Thoracoscore predicts in-hospital mortality** in thoracic surgery; it does not assess existing complications. - **ECOG performance status 0–4** is used in Thoracoscore; ECOG 3–4 patients have significantly elevated surgical risk. - In Indian thoracic surgery, Thoracoscore helps risk-stratify TB sequelae and COPD patients before lung resection. ## Mnemonics **THORACOSCORE Components (APE-C)** **A**SA grading, **P**erformance status, **E**xtent of resection, **C**omorbidities (age, FEV1, diffusion capacity, thoracic comorbidity), **Priority** of surgery. Remember: it's about *predicting* risk, not *documenting* complications. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "complication of surgery" with Thoracoscore to exploit the common misconception that all surgical scoring systems include postoperative outcomes. Students may confuse Thoracoscore (preoperative risk prediction) with postoperative complication grading systems like Clavien-Dindo, leading to the wrong answer. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian tertiary centers, Thoracoscore is routinely used to counsel high-risk TB sequelae and COPD patients before lung resection, helping surgeons and anesthesiologists decide whether to proceed with surgery or optimize further. A high Thoracoscore predicts mortality *before* the operation, guiding informed consent and perioperative planning. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 40 (Thoracic Surgery); Harrison Ch. 318 (Preoperative Assessment)_

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