Joseph Bellal, Morton John M, Hernandez-Boussard Tina, Rubinfeld Ilan, Faraj Chadi, Velanovich Vic
Division of General Surgery, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI 48202, USA.
J Am Coll Surg. 2009 Apr;208(4):520-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2009.01.019.
The relationship between hospital volume and perioperative mortality in pancreaticoduodenectomy has been well established. We studied whether associations exist between hospital volume and hospital clinical resources and between both of these factors to mortality to help explain this relationship.
This two-part study reviewed publicly available hospital information from the Leapfrog Group, HealthGrades, and hospital Web sites. Hospitals were evaluated for Leapfrog ICU staffing criteria and Safe Practice Score; HealthGrades five-star rating for complex gastrointestinal procedures and operations; and presence of a general surgery residency, gastroenterology fellowship, and interventional radiology. Evaluation used trend analysis and multiple logistic regression analysis. The second part determined the mortality rate for pancreaticoduodenectomy using inpatient mortality data from the National Inpatient Sample and Leapfrog. Hospitals were categorized by low volume (< or = 10/year), high volume (> or = 11/year), strong clinical support (presence of all support factors), and weak clinical support (absence of any factor). Data were correlated by number of pancreatic resections per hospital, hospital system clinical resources, and operative mortality.
As hospital volume increased, statistically significant increases occurred in the frequency of hospitals meeting Leapfrog ICU staffing criteria (p < 0.0001), Leapfrog Safe Practice Score (p = 0.0004), HealthGrades 5-star rating (p < 0.00001), general surgery residency (p < 0.00001), gastroenterology fellowship (p < 0.00001), and interventional radiology services (p < 0.00001). No significant relationships were found between resection volume and any one of the clinical support factors and perioperative death. Presence of strong clinical support was associated with lower mortality (odds ratio = 0.32; p = 0.001).
System clinical resources were more influential in operative mortality for pancreatic resection. This might help explain why high-volume hospitals, low-volume surgeons in high-volume institutions, and some lower-volume hospitals with excellent clinical resources have lower perioperative mortality rates for pancreatic resection.
胰腺十二指肠切除术中医院手术量与围手术期死亡率之间的关系已得到充分证实。我们研究了医院手术量与医院临床资源之间是否存在关联,以及这两个因素与死亡率之间是否存在关联,以帮助解释这种关系。
这项分为两部分的研究回顾了来自“跨越组织”(Leapfrog Group)、“健康等级”(HealthGrades)和医院网站上公开的医院信息。评估医院是否符合“跨越组织”的重症监护病房人员配备标准和安全实践评分;“健康等级”对复杂胃肠道手术的五星级评级;以及是否设有普通外科住院医师培训项目、胃肠病学 fellowship 和介入放射科。评估采用趋势分析和多元逻辑回归分析。第二部分使用来自国家住院患者样本和“跨越组织”的住院患者死亡率数据确定胰腺十二指肠切除术的死亡率。医院按低手术量(≤每年 10 例)、高手术量(≥每年 11 例)、强大临床支持(存在所有支持因素)和薄弱临床支持(不存在任何因素)进行分类。数据按每家医院的胰腺切除术数量、医院系统临床资源和手术死亡率进行关联分析。
随着医院手术量的增加,符合“跨越组织”重症监护病房人员配备标准的医院频率(p < 0.0001)、“跨越组织”安全实践评分(p = 0.0004)、“健康等级”五星级评级(p < 0.00001)、普通外科住院医师培训项目(p < 0.00001)、胃肠病学 fellowship(p < 0.00001)和介入放射科服务(p < 0.00001)均出现统计学上的显著增加。在手术量与任何一个临床支持因素和围手术期死亡之间未发现显著关系。强大临床支持的存在与较低死亡率相关(优势比 = 0.32;p = 0.001)。
系统临床资源对胰腺切除术手术死亡率的影响更大。这可能有助于解释为什么高手术量医院、高手术量机构中的低手术量外科医生以及一些具有优秀临床资源的低手术量医院胰腺切除术的围手术期死亡率较低。