Jindal Manila, Zheng Chaoyi, Quadri Humair S, Ihemelandu Chukwuemeka U, Hong Young K, Smith Andrew K, Dudeja Vikas, Shara Nawar M, Johnson Lynt B, Al-Refaie Waddah B
MedStar-Georgetown Surgical Outcomes Research Center, Washington, DC.
MedStar-Georgetown Surgical Outcomes Research Center, Washington, DC; Department of Biostatistics, Bioinformatics and Biomathematics, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.
J Am Coll Surg. 2017 Aug;225(2):216-225. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2017.04.003. Epub 2017 Apr 14.
Centralization of complex surgical care has led patients to travel longer distances. Emerging evidence suggested a negative association between increased travel distance and mortality after pancreatectomy. However, the reason for this association remains largely unknown. We sought to unravel the relationships among travel distance, receiving pancreatectomy at high-volume hospitals, delayed surgery, and operative outcomes.
We identified 44,476 patients who underwent pancreatectomy for neoplasms between 2004 and 2013 at the reporting facility from the National Cancer Database. Multivariable analyses were performed to examine the independent relationships between increments in travel distance mortality (30-day and long-term survival) after adjusting for patient demographics, comorbidity, cancer stage, and time trend. We then examined how additional adjustment of procedure volume affected this relationship overall and among rural patients.
Median travel distance to undergo pancreatectomy increased from 16.5 to 18.7 miles (p for trend < 0.001). Although longer travel distance was associated with delayed pancreatectomy, it was also related to higher odds of receiving pancreatectomy at a high-volume hospital and lower postoperative mortality. In multivariable analysis, difference in mortality among patients with varying travel distance was attenuated by adjustment for procedure volume. However, longest travel distance was still associated with a 77% lower 30-day mortality rate than shortest travel among rural patients, even when accounting for procedure volume.
Our large national study found that the beneficial effect of longer travel distance on mortality after pancreatectomy is mainly attributable to increase in procedure volume. However, it can have additional benefits on rural patients that are not explained by volume. Distance can represent a surrogate for rural populations.
复杂外科护理的集中化导致患者需要更远的路程前往就医。新出现的证据表明,胰腺切除术后行程距离增加与死亡率之间存在负相关。然而,这种关联的原因在很大程度上仍然未知。我们试图阐明行程距离、在高容量医院接受胰腺切除术、手术延迟和手术结果之间的关系。
我们从国家癌症数据库中识别出2004年至2013年在报告机构接受胰腺肿瘤切除术的44476例患者。进行多变量分析,以检验在调整患者人口统计学、合并症、癌症分期和时间趋势后,行程距离增加与死亡率(30天和长期生存率)之间的独立关系。然后,我们研究了手术量的进一步调整如何总体上以及在农村患者中影响这种关系。
接受胰腺切除术的中位行程距离从16.5英里增加到18.7英里(趋势p<0.001)。虽然更长的行程距离与胰腺切除术延迟相关,但它也与在高容量医院接受胰腺切除术的较高几率和较低的术后死亡率相关。在多变量分析中,通过调整手术量,不同行程距离患者之间的死亡率差异有所减弱。然而,即使考虑手术量,在农村患者中,最长行程距离的患者30天死亡率仍比最短行程距离的患者低77%。
我们这项大型全国性研究发现,行程距离延长对胰腺切除术后死亡率的有益影响主要归因于手术量的增加。然而,它对农村患者可能还有其他未被手术量解释的益处。距离可以作为农村人口的一个替代指标。