Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, University Of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Division of Surgical Oncology, Department Of Surgery, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
Ann Surg. 2018 May;267(5):863-867. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000002334.
Increasing surgeon volume may improve outcomes for index operations. We hypothesized that there may be surrogate operative experiences that yield similar outcomes for surgeons with a low-volume experience with a specific index operation, such as esophagectomy.
The relationship between surgeon volume and outcomes has potential implications for credentialing of surgeons. Restrictions of privileges based on surgeon volume are only reasonable if there is no substitute for direct experience with the index operation. This study was aimed at determining whether there are valid surrogates for direct experience with a sample index operation-open esophagectomy.
The Nationwide Inpatient Sample (2003-2009) was utilized. Surgeons were stratified into low and high-volume groups based on annual volume of esophagectomy. Surrogate volume was defined as the aggregate annual volume per surgeon of upper gastrointestinal operations including excision of esophageal diverticulum, gastrectomy, gastroduodenectomy, and repair of diaphragmatic hernia.
In all, 26,795 esophagectomies were performed nationwide (2003-2009), with a crude inhospital mortality rate of 5.2%. Inhospital mortality decreased with increasing volume of esophagectomies performed annually: 7.7% and 3.8% for low and high-volume surgeons, respectively (P < 0.0001). Among surgeons with a low-volume esophagectomy experience, increasing volume of surrogate operations improved the outcomes observed for esophagectomy: 9.7%, 7.1%, and 4.3% for low, medium, and high-surrogate-volume surgeons, respectively (P = 0.016).
Both operation-specific volume and surrogate volume are significant predictors of inhospital mortality for esophagectomy. Based on these observations, it would be premature to limit hospital privileges based solely on operation-specific surgeon volume criteria.
增加外科医生的手术量可能会改善索引手术的结果。我们假设,对于经验较少的外科医生,可能存在可以替代特定索引手术(如食管癌切除术)的手术经验的替代指标。
外科医生手术量与结果之间的关系可能会对外科医生的认证产生影响。只有在没有直接进行索引手术经验的替代方法的情况下,基于外科医生手术量限制特权才是合理的。本研究旨在确定是否存在直接进行样本索引手术(开放性食管癌切除术)的有效替代指标。
利用全国住院患者样本(2003-2009 年)。根据每年食管癌切除术的数量,将外科医生分为低手术量和高手术量组。替代手术量定义为每位外科医生每年进行的上消化道手术(包括食管憩室切除术、胃切除术、胃十二指肠切除术和膈疝修复术)的总年度手术量。
全国范围内共进行了 26795 例食管癌切除术(2003-2009 年),住院死亡率为 5.2%。随着每年食管癌切除术数量的增加,住院死亡率下降:低手术量和高手术量外科医生的住院死亡率分别为 7.7%和 3.8%(P<0.0001)。在低食管癌切除术经验的外科医生中,增加替代手术的数量可以改善食管癌切除术的结果:低、中、高替代手术量外科医生的住院死亡率分别为 9.7%、7.1%和 4.3%(P=0.016)。
手术特定的手术量和替代手术量都是食管癌住院死亡率的显著预测因素。根据这些观察结果,仅基于手术特定的外科医生手术量标准来限制医院特权还为时过早。