Guidry Christopher A, Newhook Timothy E, Turrentine Florence E, Sohn Min-Woong, Sawyer Robert G, Jones R Scott
*Department of Surgery, Charlottesville, VA †Division of Patient Outcomes, Policy and Population Research, Department of Public Health Sciences, Charlottesville, VA ‡Division of Acute Care Surgery and Outcomes Research, The University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville, VA.
Ann Surg. 2016 Mar;263(3):487-92. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000001361.
The purpose of this study is to determine if patient selection varies based on years of surgical practice.
The impact of hospital and surgeon volume as a marker of experience has demonstrated an inverse association with surgical outcomes. However, temporal measures of experience often demonstrate no effect. Additionally, a self-reporting survey demonstrated decreasing case complexity over time, suggesting that changes in patient selection may account for some of these observed discrepancies.
General surgery cases at a single tertiary care center reported to the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program over a 10-year period were identified. Additionally general surgery cases from the ACS NSQIP 2008 PUF data were used to create risk models for any complications, 30-day mortality, or a composite complication or mortality outcome. These models then estimated risk for our local data. Years of experience after American Board of Surgery certification were calculated for each surgeon for each case. Multivariate linear regression, controlling for surgeon clustering, was used to determine the association between years of surgical experience and preoperative risk of complications and mortality.
Eighteen thousand six hundred and eighty eight cases were identified from our institution. Surgeons selected patients of increasing operative risk until 15 years of practice before selecting lower risk patients throughout the rest of their career. After adjusting for risk, no association was observed between years from board certification and mortality. However, there was a trend toward decreasing complication rates with increasing experience.
Surgical experience significantly impacts patient selection. Surgeons with over 25 years of experience had lower complication rates. Experience had no impact on mortality.
本研究的目的是确定患者选择是否因手术实践年限而异。
医院和外科医生手术量作为经验指标的影响已显示出与手术结果呈负相关。然而,经验的时间衡量指标往往显示没有影响。此外,一项自我报告调查显示,随着时间的推移病例复杂性降低,这表明患者选择的变化可能是这些观察到的差异的部分原因。
确定了一家三级医疗中心在10年期间向美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进计划报告的普通外科病例。此外,还使用了美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进计划2008年公共使用文件数据中的普通外科病例来创建任何并发症、30天死亡率或综合并发症或死亡结果的风险模型。然后,这些模型估计了我们本地数据的风险。计算了每个外科医生每个病例在美国外科委员会认证后的经验年限。使用多变量线性回归,并控制外科医生聚类,以确定手术经验年限与术前并发症和死亡风险之间的关联。
从我们机构识别出18688例病例。外科医生选择手术风险不断增加的患者,直到有15年的实践经验,然后在其职业生涯的剩余时间里选择风险较低的患者。在调整风险后,未观察到从委员会认证起的年限与死亡率之间的关联。然而,随着经验增加,并发症发生率有下降趋势。
手术经验显著影响患者选择。有超过25年经验的外科医生并发症发生率较低。经验对死亡率没有影响。