van Heek N T, Kuhlmann K F D, Scholten R J P M, de Castro S M M, Busch O R C, van Gulik T M, Obertop H, Gouma D J
Academisch Medisch Centrum/Universiteit van Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 9, 1105 AZ, Amsterdam.
Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2006 Apr 8;150(14):791-8.
To analyse the volume-outcome effect of pancreatic surgery by means of a systematic review, and to determine the effect of the ongoing plea for centralisation of pylorus-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy in the Netherlands.
Systematic review and retrospective evaluation.
A systematic search for studies comparing hospital mortality rates after pancreatic resection in high- and low-volume hospitals was conducted. The studies were independently assessed regarding design, inclusion criteria, threshold value for high and low volume and primary hospital mortality outcome. Data were obtained from the Dutch nation-wide registry on the mortality outcome of pancreaticoduodenectomy in 1994-2003. Hospitals were divided into 4 categories based on the number of pancreaticoduodenectomies performed. The effect of the ongoing plea for centralisation was analysed.
Twelve observational studies comprising a total of 19,688 patients were included. Because the studies were too heterogeneous to allow a meta-analysis, a qualitative analysis was performed. The relative risk of dying in a high-volume hospital compared with a low-volume hospital was between 0.07 and 0.76 and was inversely proportional to the arbitrarily defined volume cut-off values. Various analyses conducted over a to-year period in the Netherlands reported mortality rates of 14-17% in hospitals that performed fewer than 5 pancreaticoduodenectomies per year, compared with rates of 0.0-3.50 degrees h in hospitals that performed more than 24 pancreaticoduodenectomies per year. The percentage of patients undergoing surgery in hospitals with a volume less than ro pancreaticoduodenectomies per year was 57% in 2000-2003 (454/792), compared with 65% (280/428) in 1994-1995.
This systematic review provided evidence of an inverse relationship between hospital volume and mortality after pancreaticoduodenectomy and confirmed the value of centralisation of this procedure in high-volume hospitals. The 10-year-long plea of the Dutch surgical community for quality assessment and, if necessary, centralisation has not resulted in a reduction in mortality rates after pancreatic resection or a change in referral patterns in The Netherlands.
通过系统评价分析胰腺手术的手术量-结局效应,并确定荷兰目前关于保留幽门的胰十二指肠切除术集中化呼吁的效果。
系统评价和回顾性评估。
系统检索比较高手术量和低手术量医院胰腺切除术后医院死亡率的研究。对这些研究的设计、纳入标准、高手术量和低手术量的阈值以及主要医院死亡率结局进行独立评估。数据来自荷兰全国1994 - 2003年胰十二指肠切除术死亡率登记处。根据实施的胰十二指肠切除术数量将医院分为4类。分析目前集中化呼吁的效果。
纳入12项观察性研究,共19688例患者。由于这些研究异质性太大,无法进行荟萃分析,因此进行了定性分析。与低手术量医院相比,高手术量医院的死亡相对风险在0.07至0.76之间,且与任意定义的手术量临界值成反比。在荷兰进行的为期10年的各种分析报告显示,每年实施少于5例胰十二指肠切除术的医院死亡率为14% - 17%,而每年实施超过24例胰十二指肠切除术的医院死亡率为0.0% - 3.5%。2000 - 2003年,每年实施少于10例胰十二指肠切除术的医院中接受手术的患者比例为57%(454/792),而1994 - 1995年为65%(280/428)。
本系统评价提供了证据,表明医院手术量与胰十二指肠切除术后死亡率之间存在反比关系,并证实了该手术在高手术量医院集中化的价值。荷兰外科界长达10年的关于质量评估以及必要时集中化的呼吁,并未导致荷兰胰腺切除术后死亡率降低或转诊模式改变。