Deyo Richard A, Mirza Sohail K
Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health and Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR, USA.
Eur Spine J. 2009 Aug;18 Suppl 3(Suppl 3):331-7. doi: 10.1007/s00586-009-0908-x. Epub 2009 Mar 6.
Most quality improvement efforts in surgery have focused on the technical quality of care provided, rather than whether the care was indicated, or could have been provided with a safer procedure. Because risk is inherent in any procedure, reducing the number of unnecessary operations is an important issue in patient safety. In the case of lumbar spine surgery, several lines of evidence suggest that, in at least some locations, there may be excessively high surgery rates. This evidence comes from international comparisons of surgical rates; study of small area variations within countries; increasing surgical rates in the absence of new indications; comparisons of surgical outcomes between geographic areas with high or low surgical rates; expert opinion; the preferences of well-informed patients; and increasing rates of repeat surgery. From a population perspective, reducing unnecessary surgery may have a greater impact on complication rates than improving the technical quality of surgery that is performed. Evidence suggests this may be true for coronary bypass surgery in the US and hysterectomy rates in Canada. Though similar studies have not been done for spine surgery, wide geographic variations in surgical rates suggest that this could be the case for spine surgery as well. We suggest that monitoring geographic variations in surgery rates may become an important aspect of quality improvement, and that rates of repeat surgery may bear special attention. Patient registries can help in this regard, if they are very complete and rigorously maintained. They can provide data on surgical rates; offer post-marketing surveillance for new surgical devices and techniques; and help to identify patient subgroups that may benefit most from certain procedures.
外科领域的大多数质量改进工作都集中在所提供护理的技术质量上,而非护理是否有必要,或者是否可以通过更安全的手术方式来提供。由于任何手术都存在风险,减少不必要手术的数量是患者安全方面的一个重要问题。就腰椎手术而言,有几条证据表明,至少在某些地区,手术率可能过高。这些证据来自手术率的国际比较;对各国国内小区域差异的研究;在没有新指征的情况下手术率不断上升;高手术率地区和低手术率地区之间手术结果的比较;专家意见;信息充分的患者的偏好;以及再次手术率的上升。从人群的角度来看,减少不必要的手术对并发症发生率的影响可能比提高已实施手术的技术质量更大。有证据表明,在美国的冠状动脉搭桥手术和加拿大的子宫切除率方面可能确实如此。尽管尚未针对脊柱手术进行类似研究,但手术率的广泛地理差异表明脊柱手术也可能是这种情况。我们建议,监测手术率的地理差异可能成为质量改进的一个重要方面,而且再次手术率可能值得特别关注。如果患者登记系统非常完整且严格维护,它们在这方面会有所帮助。它们可以提供手术率数据;对新的手术设备和技术进行上市后监测;并有助于识别可能从某些手术中获益最大的患者亚组。