1Department of Neurosurgery, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California.
2Department of Neurologic Surgery, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Clinic Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota.
J Neurosurg. 2018 May;128(5):1578-1588. doi: 10.3171/2016.4.JNS152332. Epub 2017 Aug 4.
OBJECTIVE The subspecialization of neurosurgical practice is an ongoing trend in modern neurosurgery. However, it remains unclear whether the degree of surgeon specialization is associated with improved patient outcomes. The authors hypothesized that a trend toward increased neurosurgeon specialization was associated with improved patient morbidity and mortality rates. METHODS The Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) was used (1998-2009). Patients were included in a spinal analysis cohort for instrumented spine surgery involving the cervical spine ( International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification [ICD-9-CM] codes 81.31-81.33, 81.01-81.03, 84.61-84.62, and 84.66) or lumbar spine (codes 81.04-81.08, 81.34-81.38, 84.64-84.65, and 84.68). A cranial analysis cohort consisted of patients receiving a parenchymal excision or lobectomy operation (codes 01.53 and 01.59). Surgeon specialization was measured using unique surgeon identifiers in the NIS and defined as the proportion of a surgeon's total practice dedicated to cranial or spinal cases. RESULTS A total of 46,029 and 231,875 patients were identified in the cranial and spinal analysis cohorts, respectively. On multivariate analysis in the cranial analysis cohort (after controlling for overall surgeon volume, patient demographic data/comorbidities, hospital characteristics, and admitting source), each percentage-point increase in a surgeon's cranial specialization (that is, the proportion of cranial cases) was associated with a 0.0060 reduction in the log odds of patient mortality (95% CI 0.0034-0.0086) and a 0.0042 reduction in the log odds of morbidity (95% CI 0.0032-0.0052). This resulted in a 15% difference in the predicted probability of mortality for neurosurgeons at the 75th versus the 25th percentile of cranial specialization. In the spinal analysis cohort, each percentage-point increase in a surgeon's spinal specialization was associated with a 0.0122 reduction in the log odds of mortality (95% CI 0.0074-0.0170) and a 0.0058 reduction in the log odds of morbidity (95% CI 0.0049-0.0067). This resulted in a 26.8% difference in the predicted probability of mortality for neurosurgeons at the 75th versus the 25th percentile of spinal specialization. CONCLUSIONS For both spinal and cranial surgery patient cohorts derived from the NIS database, increased surgeon specialization was significantly and independently associated with improved mortality and morbidity rates, even after controlling for overall case volume.
神经外科实践的专业化是现代神经外科学的一个持续趋势。然而,外科医生专业化的程度是否与改善患者预后相关仍不清楚。作者假设,神经外科医生专业化程度的提高趋势与患者发病率和死亡率的降低有关。
使用全国住院患者样本(NIS)(1998-2009 年)。将患者纳入接受颈椎(国际疾病分类,第九修订版,临床修正[ICD-9-CM]代码 81.31-81.33、81.01-81.03、84.61-84.62 和 84.66)或腰椎(代码 81.04-81.08、81.34-81.38、84.64-84.65 和 84.68)脊柱手术的仪器化脊柱分析队列,或接受实质切除术或叶切除术的患者(代码 01.53 和 01.59)纳入颅分析队列。外科医生的专业化程度通过 NIS 中的独特外科医生标识符进行衡量,定义为外科医生总手术量中专门用于颅或脊柱病例的比例。
颅分析队列中共有 46029 例患者,脊柱分析队列中共有 231875 例患者。在颅分析队列的多变量分析中(在控制了外科医生的总体手术量、患者人口统计学数据/合并症、医院特征和入院来源后),外科医生的颅专业化程度每增加一个百分点(即颅病例的比例),患者死亡率的对数几率就会降低 0.0060(95%CI 0.0034-0.0086),发病率的对数几率就会降低 0.0042(95%CI 0.0032-0.0052)。这导致神经外科医生在颅专业化程度第 75 百分位与第 25 百分位的死亡率预测概率相差 15%。在脊柱分析队列中,外科医生的脊柱专业化程度每增加一个百分点,死亡率的对数几率就会降低 0.0122(95%CI 0.0074-0.0170),发病率的对数几率就会降低 0.0058(95%CI 0.0049-0.0067)。这导致神经外科医生在脊柱专业化程度第 75 百分位与第 25 百分位的死亡率预测概率相差 26.8%。
对于从 NIS 数据库获得的脊柱和颅手术患者队列,即使控制了总体手术量,外科医生的专业化程度的提高与死亡率和发病率的降低显著且独立相关。