Epelboym Irene, Gawlas Irmina, Lee James A, Schrope Beth, Chabot John A, Allendorf John D
Department of Surgery, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
World J Surg. 2014 Jun;38(6):1461-7. doi: 10.1007/s00268-013-2439-1.
Large centralized databases are used with increasing frequency for reporting hospital-specific and nationwide trends and outcomes after various surgical procedures in order to improve quality of surgical care. American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) is a risk-adjusted, case-weighted complication tracking initiative that reports 30-day outcomes from more than 400 academic and community institutions in the US. However, the accuracy of event reporting specific to pancreatic surgery has never been examined in depth.
We retrospectively reviewed medical records of patients, the information on whose postoperative course was originally reported through ACS-NSQIP between 2006 and 2010. Preoperative characteristics, operative data, and postoperative events were recorded after review of electronic medical records including physician and nursing notes, operative room records and anesthesiologist reports. Fidelity of reported clinical events was assessed. Accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity were calculated for each variable of interest.
Two hundred and forty-nine pancreatectomies were reviewed, including 145 (58.2 %) Whipple procedures, 19 (7.6 %) total pancreatectomies, 65 (26.1 %) distal pancreatectomies, and 15 (6.0 %) central or partial resections. Median age was 65.7, males comprised 41.5 % of the group, and 74.3 % of patients were Caucasian. The overall rate of complications reported by NSQIP was 44.0 %, compared with 45.0 % in our review, however discordance was observed in 27.3 % of the time, including 34 cases of reporting a complication where there was not one, and 34 cases of missed complication. The most frequently reported event was postoperative bleeding requiring transfusion, however this was also the event most commonly misclassified. Additionally, three procedures unrelated to the index operation were recorded as reoperation events. While a pancreas-specific module does not yet exist, ACS-NSQIP reports a 7.6 % rate of organ-space surgical site infections; when compared with our institutional rate of Grades B and C postoperative fistula (10.4 %), we observed discordance 4.4 % of the time. Delayed gastric emptying, a common post-pancreatectomy morbidity, was not captured at all. Additionally, there were significant inaccuracies in reporting urinary tract infections, postoperative pneumonia, wound complications, and postoperative sepsis, with discordance rates of 4.4, 3.2, 3.6, and 6.8 %, respectively.
ACS-NSQIP data are an important and valuable tool for evaluating quality of surgical care, however pancreatectomy-specific postoperative events are often misclassified, underscoring the need for a hepatopancreatobiliary-specific module to better capture key outcomes in this complex and unique patient population.
大型集中式数据库越来越频繁地用于报告各种外科手术后特定医院及全国范围的趋势和结果,以提高外科护理质量。美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进计划(ACS - NSQIP)是一项风险调整、病例加权的并发症跟踪项目,报告美国400多家学术和社区机构的30天结果。然而,胰腺手术特定事件报告的准确性从未得到深入研究。
我们回顾性审查了2006年至2010年间最初通过ACS - NSQIP报告术后病程的患者病历。在审查包括医生和护士记录、手术室记录及麻醉师报告在内的电子病历时,记录术前特征、手术数据和术后事件。评估报告临床事件的保真度。计算每个感兴趣变量的准确性、敏感性和特异性。
共审查了249例胰腺切除术,包括145例(58.2%)惠普尔手术、19例(7.6%)全胰切除术、65例(26.1%)胰体尾切除术和15例(6.0%)中央或部分切除术。中位年龄为65.7岁,男性占该组的41.5%,74.3%的患者为白种人。NSQIP报告的总体并发症发生率为44.0%,而我们审查的结果为45.0%,然而27.3%的时间存在不一致,包括34例报告了实际不存在的并发症以及34例漏报并发症的情况。最常报告的事件是需要输血的术后出血,但这也是最常被错误分类的事件。此外,三项与初次手术无关的手术被记录为再次手术事件。虽然尚未存在胰腺特异性模块,但ACS - NSQIP报告的器官腔隙手术部位感染率为7.6%;与我们机构B级和C级术后胰瘘发生率(10.4%)相比,我们观察到4.4%的时间存在不一致。胰十二指肠切除术后常见的胃排空延迟根本未被记录。此外,在报告尿路感染、术后肺炎、伤口并发症和术后脓毒症方面存在显著不准确,不一致率分别为4.4%、3.2%、3.6%和6.8%。
ACS - NSQIP数据是评估外科护理质量的重要且有价值的工具,然而胰腺切除术特定的术后事件常被错误分类,这突出表明需要一个肝胆胰特异性模块来更好地获取这一复杂且独特患者群体的关键结果。