Northwest Center for Outcomes Research in Older Adults, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, Washington; Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington.
Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Washington.
Gastroenterology. 2013 Feb;144(2):298-306. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2012.10.038. Epub 2012 Oct 25.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: We investigated the rate and predictors of anesthesia assistance during outpatient colonoscopy and whether anesthesia assistance is associated with colonoscopy interventions and outcomes.
We performed a retrospective cohort study using a 20% sample of Medicare administrative claims submitted during the 2003 calendar year. We analyzed data from 328,177 adults, 66 years old or older, who underwent outpatient colonoscopy examinations.
Overall, 8.7% of outpatient colonoscopies were performed with anesthesia assistance. In multivariate analysis, independent predictors of anesthesia assistance included black race, female sex, and a nonscreening indication; anesthesia assistance increased with median income and comorbidities. General and colorectal surgeons, fewer years in their practice, and nonhospital site of service were also significantly associated with anesthesia assistance. The strongest predictor of anesthesia assistance was the Medicare carrier, with odds ratios ranging from 0.22 (95% confidence interval: 0.12-0.43) for the Arkansas carrier (crude rate 0.9%) to 9.90 (95% confidence interval: 7.92-12.39) for the Empire carrier in New York area (crude rate 35.3%) compared with the Wisconsin carrier (crude rate 4.3%). There was also considerable variation among endoscopists; 75% of providers had no colonoscopies with anesthesia assistance recorded in their dataset, and 4.5% of providers had anesthesia assistance in at least three quarters of their examinations. Anesthesia assistance was not associated with the diagnosis of polyps, the performance of biopsy or polypectomy, or complications in multivariate analyses.
There are significant variations among regions and sites of service in anesthesia assistance during outpatient colonoscopies of Medicare beneficiaries. Although this variation has considerable economic implications, it was not associated with measures of patient risk or outcomes, such as polyp detection or procedure-related complications.
我们调查了门诊结肠镜检查中麻醉辅助的比例和预测因素,以及麻醉辅助是否与结肠镜检查干预和结果相关。
我们使用 2003 年日历年内提交的医疗保险管理索赔的 20%样本进行了回顾性队列研究。我们分析了 328177 名 66 岁或以上接受门诊结肠镜检查的成年人的数据。
总体而言,8.7%的门诊结肠镜检查是在麻醉辅助下进行的。在多变量分析中,麻醉辅助的独立预测因素包括黑人种族、女性和非筛查指征;麻醉辅助随着中位收入和合并症的增加而增加。普通外科医生和结直肠外科医生、从业年限较短以及非医院服务地点也与麻醉辅助显著相关。麻醉辅助的最强预测因素是医疗保险承保人,其优势比范围从阿肯色州承保人(粗率为 0.9%)的 0.22(95%置信区间:0.12-0.43)到纽约地区的帝国承保人(粗率为 35.3%)的 9.90(95%置信区间:7.92-12.39),与威斯康星州承保人(粗率为 4.3%)相比。内镜医生之间也存在相当大的差异;75%的提供者在其数据集中没有记录到麻醉辅助的结肠镜检查,而 4.5%的提供者在至少四分之三的检查中都有麻醉辅助。在多变量分析中,麻醉辅助与息肉的诊断、活检或息肉切除术的进行或并发症无关。
在医疗保险受益人的门诊结肠镜检查中,麻醉辅助在地区和服务地点之间存在显著差异。尽管这种差异具有相当大的经济意义,但它与患者风险或结果的衡量指标(如息肉检出率或与手术相关的并发症)无关。