Pour Aidin Eslam, Bradbury Thomas L, Horst Patrick, Harrast John J, Erens Greg A, Roberson James R
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Michigan, 2912 Taubman Center 1500 E. Medical Center Dr, Ann Arbor, MI, 48109, USA.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Int Orthop. 2016 Oct;40(10):2061-2067. doi: 10.1007/s00264-016-3137-z. Epub 2016 Feb 22.
A certified list of all operative cases performed within a six month period is required of surgeons by the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery (ABOS) as a prerequisite to taking the Part II Oral Examination. Using the data on these cases collected and maintained by ABOS, this study assessed the influence of prior fellowship training in adult reconstruction on the volume and surgeon-reported complication rate of knee joint arthroplasty cases over time.
All data were self reported to a secure Internet database (SCRIBE) by candidates who applied to take Part II of the ABOS Examination for the first time. This database was searched for all procedures done between 2003 and 2013 with CPT codes for total and revision knee arthroplasty and removal of knee implant (static or dynamic spacer) to determine procedural volumes and early complication rates among Board-eligible orthopaedic surgeons with and without adult reconstructive fellowship training.
More than 43,000 knee arthroplasty surgeries were identified. Surgeons who had completed adult reconstruction fellowship training after residency performed 55 % of total knee arthroplasties, averaging 33.5 knee arthroplasties during the six month case-collection period compared to 7.4 procedures by non-fellowship-trained surgeons (p < 0.001). Adult reconstruction fellowship-trained surgeons performed significantly more revisions for infection (average 6.6 versus 2.2 revisions) (p < 0.001). Adult reconstruction fellowship training did not significantly affect complication rates for primary arthroplasty but was associated with an increased complication rate for revisions. Those surgeons who performed more than 100 arthroplasties a year reported significantly fewer complications in primary arthroplasties (12.7 % versus 16.9 %) (p < 0.001). Over time, an increasing percentage of arthroplasties were done by surgeons with adult reconstruction fellowship training.
Adult reconstruction fellowship-trained surgeons performed an increasing number of primary and more complex knee arthroplasties from 2003 to 2013. Surgeons who perform a larger volume of knee arthroplasty surgeries report fewer early complications than surgeons with fewer cases.
美国骨科手术委员会(ABOS)要求外科医生提供一份在六个月内完成的所有手术病例的认证清单,作为参加第二部分口试的先决条件。本研究利用ABOS收集和保存的这些病例数据,评估成人重建领域先前的 fellowship 培训对膝关节置换病例数量及外科医生报告的并发症发生率随时间的影响。
所有数据均由首次申请参加ABOS考试第二部分的考生自行上报至一个安全的互联网数据库(SCRIBE)。在该数据库中搜索2003年至2013年间使用全膝关节置换术、翻修膝关节置换术及取出膝关节植入物(静态或动态间隔器)的CPT编码进行的所有手术,以确定接受和未接受成人重建 fellowship 培训的符合委员会资格的骨科医生的手术量及早期并发症发生率。
共识别出超过43,000例膝关节置换手术。完成住院医师培训后又接受成人重建 fellowship 培训的外科医生实施了55%的全膝关节置换术,在六个月的病例收集期内平均进行33.5例膝关节置换术,而未接受 fellowship 培训的外科医生平均进行7.4例(p < 0.001)。接受成人重建 fellowship 培训的外科医生因感染进行的翻修手术明显更多(平均6.6次翻修对2.2次)(p < 0.001)。成人重建 fellowship 培训对初次置换术的并发症发生率没有显著影响,但与翻修手术的并发症发生率增加有关。每年进行超过100例置换手术的外科医生报告的初次置换术并发症明显较少(12.7%对16.9%)(p < 0.001)。随着时间的推移,接受成人重建 fellowship 培训的外科医生进行的置换手术比例不断增加。
从2003年到2013年,接受成人重建 fellowship 培训的外科医生进行的初次及更复杂的膝关节置换手术数量不断增加。进行膝关节置换手术量较大的外科医生报告的早期并发症比手术量较少的外科医生少。
4级。