Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2014 Jul;472(7):2006-15. doi: 10.1007/s11999-014-3515-z. Epub 2014 Mar 11.
Many patients change hospitals for revision total joint arthroplasty (TJA). The implications of changing hospitals must be better understood to inform appropriate utilization strategies.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) How frequently do patients change hospitals for revision TJA? (2) Which patient, community, and hospital characteristics are associated with changing hospitals? (3) Is there an increased complication risk after changing hospitals?
We identified 17,018 patients who underwent primary TJA and subsequent same-joint revision in New York or California (1997-2005) from statewide databases. Medicare was the most common payer (56%) followed by private insurance (31%). We identified patients who changed hospitals for revision TJA and those who experienced in-hospital complications. Patient, community, and hospital characteristics were analyzed to determine predictors for changing hospitals for revision TJA and the effect of changing hospitals on subsequent complications.
Thirty percent of patients changed hospitals for revision. Older patients were less likely to change hospitals (odds ratio [OR], 0.84; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.73-0.96); no other patient characteristics were associated with changing hospitals. Patients who had index TJA at the highest-volume hospitals were less likely to change hospitals (OR, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.48-0.57). Overall, changing hospitals was associated with higher complication risk (OR, 1.19; 95% CI, 1.03-1.39). Changing to a lower-volume hospital (6% of patients undergoing revision TJA) was associated with a higher risk of complications (OR, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.05-1.74). A post hoc number needed-to-treat analysis indicates that 234 patients would need to be moved from a lower volume hospital to a higher volume hospital to avoid one overall complication event after revision TJA.
Although the complication risk was higher if changing hospitals, this finding was sensitive to the type of change. Our findings build on the existing evidence of a volume-outcomes benefit for revision TJA by examining the effect of volume in view of potential patient migration.
Level III, therapeutic study. See Instructions for Authors for a complete description of levels of evidence.
许多患者会更换医院进行翻修全关节置换术(TJA)。为了制定合理的利用策略,必须更好地了解更换医院的影响。
问题/目的:(1)患者因翻修 TJA 而更换医院的频率是多少?(2)哪些患者、社区和医院特征与更换医院有关?(3)更换医院后是否会增加并发症风险?
我们从全州数据库中确定了 1997 年至 2005 年间在纽约或加利福尼亚州接受初次 TJA 后同一关节翻修的 17018 名患者。医疗保险是最常见的支付方(56%),其次是私人保险(31%)。我们确定了因翻修 TJA 而更换医院的患者和经历院内并发症的患者。分析患者、社区和医院特征,以确定翻修 TJA 更换医院的预测因素以及更换医院对后续并发症的影响。
30%的患者因翻修而更换医院。年龄较大的患者不太可能更换医院(优势比[OR],0.84;95%置信区间[CI],0.73-0.96);没有其他患者特征与更换医院有关。在最高容量医院接受初次 TJA 的患者不太可能更换医院(OR,0.52;95%CI,0.48-0.57)。总体而言,更换医院与更高的并发症风险相关(OR,1.19;95%CI,1.03-1.39)。更换至低容量医院(6%的患者接受翻修 TJA)与并发症风险升高相关(OR,1.36;95%CI,1.05-1.74)。事后的需要治疗的人数分析表明,在翻修 TJA 后,需要将 234 名患者从低容量医院转移到高容量医院,以避免发生总体并发症事件。
尽管更换医院会增加并发症风险,但这一发现取决于医院类型。我们的研究结果在考虑潜在患者迁移的情况下,以现有的翻修 TJA 容量-结果获益证据为基础,进一步研究了容量的影响。
三级,治疗性研究。请参阅作者说明以获取完整的证据水平描述。