Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Phoenix2Mayo Clinic Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Center for the Science of Health Care Delivery, Surgical Outcomes Division, Phoenix, Arizona.
Mayo Clinic Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Center for the Science of Health Care Delivery, Surgical Outcomes Division, Phoenix, Arizona.
JAMA. 2015 Feb 3;313(5):505-11. doi: 10.1001/jama.2015.90.
Programs that analyze and report rates of surgical complications are an increasing focus of quality improvement efforts. The most comprehensive tool currently used for outcomes monitoring in the United States is the American College of Surgeons (ACS) National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP).
To compare surgical outcomes experienced by patients treated at hospitals that did vs did not participate in the NSQIP.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Data from the University HealthSystem Consortium from January 2009 to July 2013 were used to identify elective hospitalizations representing a broad spectrum of elective general/vascular operations in the United States. Data on hospital participation in the NSQIP were obtained through review of semiannual reports published by the ACS. Hospitalizations at any hospital that discontinued or initiated participation in the NSQIP during the study period were excluded after the date on which that hospital's status changed. A difference-in-differences approach was used to model the association between hospital-based participation in NSQIP and changes in rates of postoperative outcomes over time.
Hospital participation in the NSQIP.
Risk-adjusted rates of any complications, serious complications, and mortality during a hospitalization for elective general/vascular surgery.
The cohort included 345,357 hospitalizations occurring in 113 different academic hospitals; 172,882 (50.1%) hospitalizations were in NSQIP hospitals. Hospitalized patients were predominantly female (61.5%), with a mean age of 55.7 years. The types of procedures performed most commonly in the analyzed hospitalizations were hernia repairs (15.7%), bariatric (10.5%), mastectomy (9.7%), and cholecystectomy (9.0%). After accounting for patient risk, procedure type, underlying hospital performance, and temporal trends, the difference-in-differences model demonstrated no statistically significant differences over time between NSQIP and non-NSQIP hospitals in terms of likelihood of complications (adjusted odds ratio, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.97-1.03), serious complications (adjusted odds ratio, 0.98; 95% CI, 0.94-1.03), or mortality (adjusted odds ratio, 1.04; 95% CI, 0.94-1.14).
No association was found between hospital-based participation in the NSQIP and improvements in postoperative outcomes over time within a large cohort of patients undergoing elective general/vascular operations at academic hospitals in the United States. These findings suggest that a surgical outcomes reporting system does not provide a clear mechanism for quality improvement.
分析和报告手术并发症发生率的项目是质量改进工作的重点。目前,美国用于监测结果的最全面的工具是美国外科医师学院(ACS)国家外科质量改进计划(NSQIP)。
比较在参与和不参与 NSQIP 的医院接受治疗的患者的手术结果。
设计、地点和参与者:使用 2009 年 1 月至 2013 年 7 月期间的大学健康联盟数据,确定代表美国广泛的普通/血管择期手术的择期住院。通过审查 ACS 发布的半年报告获得有关医院参与 NSQIP 的数据。在研究期间,任何一家医院停止或开始参与 NSQIP 后,该医院的状态发生变化之日起,就会排除该医院的住院情况。采用差异法来模拟医院参与 NSQIP 与术后结果发生率随时间变化的关系。
医院参与 NSQIP。
择期普通/血管手术住院期间任何并发症、严重并发症和死亡率的风险调整率。
队列包括 345357 例住院治疗,发生在 113 家不同的学术医院;172882 例(50.1%)住院治疗在 NSQIP 医院进行。住院患者主要为女性(61.5%),平均年龄为 55.7 岁。分析住院患者中最常见的手术类型为疝修补术(15.7%)、减肥手术(10.5%)、乳房切除术(9.7%)和胆囊切除术(9.0%)。在考虑患者风险、手术类型、基础医院绩效和时间趋势后,差异法模型显示,在并发症(调整后的优势比,1.00;95%CI,0.97-1.03)、严重并发症(调整后的优势比,0.98;95%CI,0.94-1.03)或死亡率(调整后的优势比,1.04;95%CI,0.94-1.14)方面,NSQIP 医院和非 NSQIP 医院之间的时间差异没有统计学意义。
在美国学术医院接受普通/血管择期手术的大量患者中,未发现医院参与 NSQIP 与术后结果随时间的改善之间存在关联。这些发现表明,手术结果报告系统并没有为质量改进提供明确的机制。