Reames Bradley N, Ghaferi Amir A, Birkmeyer John D, Dimick Justin B
From the Center for Healthcare Outcomes and Policy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Ann Surg. 2014 Aug;260(2):244-51. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000000375.
To determine whether the relationship between hospital volume and mortality has changed over time.
It is generally accepted that hospital volume is associated with mortality in high-risk procedures. However, as surgical safety has improved over the last decade, recent evidence has suggested that the inverse relationship has diminished or been eliminated.
Using national Medicare claims data from 2000 through 2009, we examined mortality among 3,282,127 patients who underwent 1 of 8 gastrointestinal, cardiac, or vascular procedures. Hospitals were stratified into quintiles of operative volume. Using multivariable logistic regression models to adjust for patient characteristics, we examined the relationship between hospital volume and mortality, and assessed for changes over time. We performed sensitivity analyses using hierarchical logistic regression modeling with hospital-level random effects to confirm our results.
Throughout the 10-year period, a significant inverse relationship was observed in all procedures. In 5 of the 8 procedures studied, the strength of the volume-outcome relationship increased over time. In esophagectomy, for example, the adjusted odds ratio of mortality in very low volume hospitals compared to very high volume hospitals increased from 2.25 [95% confidence interval (CI): 1.57-3.23] in 2000-2001 to 3.68 (95% CI: 2.66-5.11) in 2008-2009. Only pancreatectomy showed a notable decrease in strength of the relationship over time, from 5.83 (95% CI: 3.64-9.36) in 2000-2001, to 3.08 (95% CI: 2.07-4.57) in 2008-2009.
For all procedures examined, higher volume hospitals had significantly lower mortality rates than lower volume hospitals. Despite recent improvements in surgical safety, the strong inverse relationship between hospital volume and mortality persists in the modern era.
确定医院手术量与死亡率之间的关系是否随时间发生了变化。
一般认为,在高风险手术中,医院手术量与死亡率相关。然而,随着过去十年手术安全性的提高,最近有证据表明这种负相关关系已经减弱或消除。
利用2000年至2009年全国医疗保险索赔数据,我们研究了3282127例接受8种胃肠道、心脏或血管手术之一的患者的死亡率。医院被分为手术量的五等份。使用多变量逻辑回归模型对患者特征进行调整,我们研究了医院手术量与死亡率之间的关系,并评估了随时间的变化。我们使用具有医院水平随机效应的分层逻辑回归模型进行敏感性分析以证实我们的结果。
在整个10年期间,所有手术均观察到显著的负相关关系。在所研究的8种手术中的5种中,手术量-结果关系的强度随时间增加。例如,在食管切除术中,极低手术量医院与极高手术量医院相比的调整后死亡率比值比从2000 - 2001年的2.25[95%置信区间(CI):1.57 - 3.23]增加到2008 - 2009年的3.68(95%CI:2.66 - 5.11)。只有胰腺切除术显示随着时间推移关系强度显著下降,从2000 - 2001年的5.83(95%CI:3.64 - 9.36)降至2008 - 2009年的3.08(95%CI:2.07 - 4.57)。
对于所有检查的手术,手术量较高的医院死亡率显著低于手术量较低的医院。尽管最近手术安全性有所提高,但在现代,医院手术量与死亡率之间的强负相关关系仍然存在。