Hutter Matthew M, Rowell Katherine S, Devaney Lynn A, Sokal Suzanne M, Warshaw Andrew L, Abbott William M, Hodin Richard A
Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
J Am Coll Surg. 2006 Nov;203(5):618-24. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2006.07.010. Epub 2006 Sep 27.
Despite advances by surgeons in assessing quality and safety, the traditional surgical morbidity and mortality (M&M) conference has mostly remained unchallenged and unchanged. The goal of this study was to compare data as reported in a traditional M&M conference to data collected using the American College of Surgeons-National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) techniques.
A retrospective study was performed comparing data from the M&M conference in a general surgery division, in which complications and deaths were identified by residents or attendings, to data compiled by a nationally audited nurse reviewer from the ACS-NSQIP from July 1, 2002, to June 30, 2003.
Mortality rates calculated by traditional M&M conference (53 deaths in 5,905 patients), compared with the ACS-NSQIP nurse reviewer (28 deaths in 1,439 patients; 24% sample), were 0.9% versus 1.9%, respectively (p=0.001). Complication rates reported in M&M were 6.4% versus 28.9% ACS-NSQIP (p<0.0001). Subgroup analyses showed that mortality rates, as reported in conference, were substantially lower for both in-hospital and postdischarge patients, when compared with ACS-NSQIP. All subclassifications of complications, as presented in conference, were also lower, compared with ACS-NSQIP.
Traditional surgical M&M reporting considerably underreports both in-hospital and postdischarge complications and deaths as compared with ACS-NSQIP. Approximately one of two deaths and three of four complications were not reported in the M&M conference at our institution. A Web-based reporting system based on an ACS-NSQIP platform was created to automate, facilitate, and standardize data on surgical morbidity and mortality.
尽管外科医生在评估质量和安全性方面取得了进展,但传统的手术发病率和死亡率(M&M)会议大多仍未受到质疑且保持不变。本研究的目的是将传统M&M会议报告的数据与使用美国外科医师学会-国家外科质量改进计划(ACS-NSQIP)技术收集的数据进行比较。
进行了一项回顾性研究,将普通外科部门M&M会议的数据(住院医师或主治医师识别并发症和死亡情况)与2002年7月1日至2003年6月30日由ACS-NSQIP的全国审核护士审核员汇编的数据进行比较。
传统M&M会议计算的死亡率(5905例患者中有53例死亡)与ACS-NSQIP护士审核员计算的死亡率(1439例患者中有28例死亡;抽样24%)分别为0.9%和1.9%(p=0.001)。M&M会议报告的并发症发生率为6.4%,而ACS-NSQIP为28.9%(p<0.0001)。亚组分析表明,与ACS-NSQIP相比,会议报告的住院患者和出院后患者的死亡率均显著较低。会议中呈现的所有并发症亚分类与ACS-NSQIP相比也较低。
与ACS-NSQIP相比,传统的手术M&M报告严重低估了住院患者和出院后患者的并发症及死亡情况。在我们机构的M&M会议中,约二分之一的死亡病例和四分之三的并发症病例未被报告。基于ACS-NSQIP平台创建了一个基于网络的报告系统,以实现手术发病率和死亡率数据的自动化、便利化和标准化。