Zacharias Anoar, Schwann Thomas A, Riordan Christopher J, Durham Samuel J, Shah Aamir, Papadimos Thomas J, Engoren Milo, Habib Robert H
Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, St. Vincent Mercy Medical Center, Toledo, Ohio 43608, USA.
Ann Thorac Surg. 2005 Jun;79(6):1961-9. doi: 10.1016/j.athoracsur.2004.12.002.
Worse operative mortality has been reported for hospitals with low versus high coronary artery bypass grafting surgery volumes. Despite a lack of comparisons beyond the early postoperative period and evidence of surgeon-volume confounding, some have suggested that regionalization of coronary artery bypass grafting in favor of high volume institutions is warranted.
We retrospectively compared operative mortality and 3-year survival in coronary artery bypass grafting patients (2001 to 2003) at a low-volume hospital (n = 504; 160 per year [median]) versus a high-volume hospital (n = 1,410; 487 per year) served by the same high-volume surgeon team. Covariate risk adjustment was done via multivariate and propensity modeling.
The two hospital cohorts exhibited multiple demographic and risk factor differences. Unadjusted low-volume hospital vs high-volume hospital operative mortality was similar overall (2.38% vs 2.98%; p = 0.59) with nearly identical Society of Thoracic Surgeons observed-to-expected ratios (0.83 vs 0.82), irrespective of preoperative risk category. Hospital volume did not predict operative mortality (odds ratio, 95% confidence interval = 0.82; p = 0.602). At follow-up, a total of 28 low-volume hospital deaths (5.6%) and 135 high-volume hospital deaths (9.6%) occurred at similar surgery-to-death intervals (p = 0.7). Unadjusted 0 to 3-year survival was significantly worse for high-volume hospitals (risk ratio = 1.59; 1.06 to 2.39; p = 0.026). Yet procedure volume was not independently associated with worse midterm survival after covariate (risk ratio = 1.28; 0.84 to 1.96; p = 0.247) or propensity score (risk ratio = 1.11; 0.72 to 1.71; p = 0.648) adjustment.
Hospital and surgeon volume effects on coronary artery bypass grafting outcomes are interdependent, and therefore hospital coronary artery bypass grafting volume per se is not a reliable marker of quality. Instead, outcome quality markers should rely on thorough risk-adjustment based on detailed clinical databases, possibly including annual and cumulative surgeon volume.
据报道,冠状动脉旁路移植手术量低的医院与手术量高的医院相比,手术死亡率更高。尽管缺乏术后早期以外的比较以及外科医生手术量混杂的证据,但一些人认为冠状动脉旁路移植手术向手术量高的机构集中是有必要的。
我们回顾性比较了由同一高手术量外科医生团队服务的一家低手术量医院(n = 504;每年160例[中位数])和一家高手术量医院(n = 1410;每年487例)中冠状动脉旁路移植手术患者(2001年至2003年)的手术死亡率和3年生存率。通过多变量和倾向评分建模进行协变量风险调整。
两个医院队列在多个人口统计学和风险因素方面存在差异。未经调整的低手术量医院与高手术量医院的总体手术死亡率相似(2.38%对2.98%;p = 0.59),胸外科医师协会观察到的与预期的比率几乎相同(0.83对0.82),无论术前风险类别如何。医院手术量并不能预测手术死亡率(优势比,95%置信区间 = 0.82;p = 0.602)。在随访中,低手术量医院共28例死亡(5.6%),高手术量医院共135例死亡(9.6%),手术至死亡间隔相似(p = 0.7)。未经调整的0至3年生存率在高手术量医院显著更差(风险比 = 1.59;1.06至2.39;p = 0.026)。然而,在进行协变量(风险比 = 1.28;0.84至1.96;p = 0.247)或倾向评分(风险比 = 1.11;0.72至1.71;p = 0.648)调整后,手术量与中期生存率较差并无独立关联。
医院和外科医生手术量对冠状动脉旁路移植手术结果的影响是相互依存的,因此医院冠状动脉旁路移植手术量本身并不是质量的可靠指标。相反,结果质量指标应基于详细的临床数据库进行全面的风险调整,可能包括年度和累积的外科医生手术量。