Welke Karl F, O'Brien Sean M, Peterson Eric D, Ungerleider Ross M, Jacobs Marshall L, Jacobs Jeffery P
Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Ore. 97239-3098, USA.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2009 May;137(5):1133-40. doi: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2008.12.012. Epub 2009 Mar 17.
We sought to determine the association between pediatric cardiac surgical volume and mortality using sophisticated case-mix adjustment and a national clinical database.
Patients 18 years of age or less who had a cardiac operation between 2002 and 2006 were identified in the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Congenital Heart Surgery Database (32,413 patients from 48 programs). Programs were grouped by yearly pediatric cardiac surgical volume (small, <150; medium, 150-249; large, 250-349; and very large, >or=350 cases per year). Logistic regression was used to adjust mortality rates for volume, surgical case mix (Aristotle Basic Complexity and Risk Adjustment for Congenital Heart Surgery, Version 1 categories), patient risk factors, and year of operation.
With adjustment for patient-level risk factors and surgical case mix, there was an inverse relationship between overall surgical volume as a continuous variable and mortality (P = .002). When the data were displayed graphically, there appeared to be an inflection point between 200 and 300 cases per year. When volume was analyzed as a categorical variable, the relationship was most apparent for difficult operations (Aristotle technical difficulty component score, >3.0), for which mortality decreased from 14.8% (60/406) at small programs to 8.4% (157/1858) at very large programs (P = .02). The same was true for the subgroup of patients who underwent Norwood procedures (36.5% [23/63] vs 16.9% [81/479], P < .0001). After risk adjustment, all groups performed similarly for low-difficulty operations. Conversely, for difficult procedures, small programs performed significantly worse. For Norwood procedures, very large programs outperformed all other groups.
There was an inverse association between pediatric cardiac surgical volume and mortality that became increasingly important as case complexity increased. Although volume was not associated with mortality for low-complexity cases, lower-volume programs underperformed larger programs as case complexity increased.
我们试图利用复杂的病例组合调整方法和一个全国性临床数据库来确定小儿心脏手术量与死亡率之间的关联。
在胸外科医师协会先天性心脏病手术数据库中识别出2002年至2006年间接受心脏手术的18岁及以下患者(来自48个项目的32413名患者)。各项目按每年小儿心脏手术量分组(小,<150例;中,150 - 249例;大,250 - 349例;非常大,≥350例/年)。采用逻辑回归对手术量、手术病例组合(先天性心脏病手术的亚里士多德基本复杂性和风险调整,第1版类别)、患者风险因素及手术年份进行死亡率调整。
在对患者层面的风险因素和手术病例组合进行调整后,作为连续变量的总体手术量与死亡率之间呈负相关(P = 0.002)。以图形方式展示数据时,每年200至300例之间似乎存在一个拐点。当将手术量作为分类变量进行分析时,这种关系在困难手术中最为明显(亚里士多德技术难度成分评分,>3.0),其死亡率从小项目的14.8%(60/406)降至非常大项目的8.4%(157/1858)(P = 0.02)。接受诺伍德手术的患者亚组情况也是如此(36.5% [23/63] 对16.9% [81/479],P < 0.0001)。经过风险调整后,所有组在低难度手术中的表现相似。相反,对于困难手术,小项目的表现明显更差。对于诺伍德手术,非常大的项目表现优于所有其他组。
小儿心脏手术量与死亡率之间存在负相关,且随着病例复杂性增加,这种关联变得越发重要。虽然手术量与低复杂性病例的死亡率无关,但随着病例复杂性增加,手术量较低的项目表现不如较大的项目。