Checchia Paul A, McCollegan Jamie, Daher Noha, Kolovos Nikoleta, Levy Fiona, Markovitz Barry
Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatric, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO 63110, USA.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2005 Apr;129(4):754-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2004.07.056.
We analyze the effect of surgical case volume on the survival of infants with hypoplastic left heart syndrome who underwent stage I surgical palliation (the Norwood procedure). The purpose of our study was to understand more clearly the relative effects of institution and surgeon experience on patient outcome.
Using the Pediatric Health Information System database belonging to the pediatric hospital members of the Child Health Corporation of America, we identified newborn infants (< 30 days old on admission) from 1998 through 2001 admitted with the diagnosis of hypoplastic left heart syndrome. Stepwise multiple regression analysis was used to examine the association between both institutional and surgeon case volume with 28-day survival after the Norwood procedure.
Twenty-nine hospitals and 87 surgeons performed 801 Norwood procedures during the study period. In the 4 of 29 institutions that averaged 1 or more Norwood procedures per month during the study period, survival averaged 78%. The remaining 25 institutions averaged 1 Norwood procedure every 9.6 weeks, with a survival of 59%. Data analysis revealed that higher institutional volume (P = .02) but not the number of cases performed by surgeons (P = .13) increased survival after the Norwood procedure. There was no such association with average length of stay in survivors or the time to mortality in nonsurvivors.
Survival after the Norwood procedure is associated with institutional Norwood procedure volume but not with individual surgeon case volume, suggesting the need for improvements in institutional-based approaches to the care of children with hypoplastic left heart syndrome and the need for establishing regional referral centers for such high-risk procedures to improve patient survival.
我们分析了手术病例数量对接受一期手术姑息治疗(诺伍德手术)的左心发育不全综合征婴儿生存率的影响。我们研究的目的是更清楚地了解机构和外科医生经验对患者预后的相对影响。
利用美国儿童健康公司儿科医院成员的儿科健康信息系统数据库,我们确定了1998年至2001年入院时诊断为左心发育不全综合征的新生儿(入院时小于30天)。采用逐步多元回归分析来检验机构和外科医生病例数量与诺伍德手术后28天生存率之间的关联。
在研究期间,29家医院和87名外科医生进行了801例诺伍德手术。在研究期间平均每月进行1例或更多例诺伍德手术的29家机构中的4家,生存率平均为78%。其余25家机构平均每9.6周进行1例诺伍德手术,生存率为59%。数据分析显示,更高的机构手术量(P = .02)而非外科医生的手术例数(P = .13)增加了诺伍德手术后的生存率。在幸存者的平均住院时间或非幸存者的死亡时间方面没有这种关联。
诺伍德手术后的生存率与机构的诺伍德手术量相关,而与外科医生个人的病例数量无关,这表明需要改进基于机构的左心发育不全综合征患儿护理方法,并且需要建立针对此类高风险手术的区域转诊中心以提高患者生存率。