Hashimoto Daniel A, Bababekov Yanik J, Mehtsun Winta T, Stapleton Sahael M, Warshaw Andrew L, Lillemoe Keith D, Chang David C, Vagefi Parsia A
*Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA †Codman Center for Clinical Effectiveness, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA.
Ann Surg. 2017 Oct;266(4):603-609. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000002377.
To investigate the effect of subspecialty practice and experience on the relationship between annual volume and inpatient mortality after hepatic resection.
The impact of annual surgical volume on postoperative outcomes has been extensively examined. However, the impact of cumulative surgeon experience and specialty training on this relationship warrants investigation.
The New York Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System inpatient database was queried for patients' ≥18 years who underwent wedge hepatectomy or lobectomy from 2000 to 2014. Primary exposures included annual surgeon volume, surgeon experience (early vs late career), and surgical specialization-categorized as general surgery (GS), surgical oncology (SO), and transplant (TS). Primary endpoint was inpatient mortality. Hierarchical logistic regression was performed accounting for correlation at the level of the surgeon and the hospital, and adjusting for patient demographics, comorbidities, presence of cirrhosis, and annual surgical hospital volume.
A total of 13,467 cases were analyzed. Overall inpatient mortality was 2.35%. On unadjusted analysis, late career surgeons had a mortality rate of 2.62% versus 1.97% for early career surgeons. GS had a mortality rate of 2.98% compared with 1.68% for SO and 2.67% for TS. Once risk-adjusted, annual volume was associated with reduced mortality only among early-career surgeons (odds ratio 0.82, P = 0.001) and general surgeons (odds ratio 0.65, P = 0.002). No volume effect was seen among late-career or specialty-trained surgeons.
Annual volume alone likely contributes only a partial assessment of the volume-outcome relationship. In patients undergoing hepatic resection, increased annual volume did not confer a mortality benefit on subspecialty surgeons or late career surgeons.
探讨亚专业实践和经验对肝切除术后年手术量与住院死亡率之间关系的影响。
年手术量对术后结局的影响已得到广泛研究。然而,外科医生累积经验和专业培训对这种关系的影响值得研究。
查询纽约州全州规划与研究合作系统住院患者数据库,纳入2000年至2014年接受楔形肝切除术或肝叶切除术且年龄≥18岁的患者。主要暴露因素包括外科医生年手术量、外科医生经验(职业生涯早期与晚期)以及手术专科,分为普通外科(GS)、外科肿瘤学(SO)和移植外科(TS)。主要终点为住院死亡率。进行分层逻辑回归分析,考虑外科医生和医院层面的相关性,并对患者人口统计学、合并症、肝硬化情况以及医院年手术量进行调整。
共分析13467例病例。总体住院死亡率为2.35%。未经调整的分析显示,职业生涯晚期的外科医生死亡率为2.62%,而职业生涯早期的外科医生死亡率为1.97%。普通外科的死亡率为2.98%,相比之下,外科肿瘤学为1.68%,移植外科为2.67%。一旦进行风险调整,年手术量仅与职业生涯早期的外科医生(比值比0.82,P = 0.001)和普通外科医生(比值比0.65,P = 0.002)的死亡率降低相关。在职业生涯晚期或接受专科培训的外科医生中未观察到手术量效应。
仅年手术量可能仅对手术量与结局关系提供部分评估。在接受肝切除的患者中,年手术量增加并未给亚专科外科医生或职业生涯晚期的外科医生带来死亡率获益。