Cincinnati Research in Outcomes and Safety in Surgery (CROSS), Department of Surgery, University of Cincinnati School of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
The James and Catherine Orr Endowed Chair of Liver Transplantation, University of Cincinnati School of Medicine, 231 Albert Sabin Way, ML 0558, MSB 2006C, Cincinnati, OH, 45267-0558, USA.
J Gastrointest Surg. 2018 Feb;22(2):321-328. doi: 10.1007/s11605-017-3592-x. Epub 2017 Sep 29.
Several studies have identified a "weekend effect" for surgical outcomes, but definitions vary and the cause is unclear. Our aim was to better characterize the weekend effect for emergency general surgery using mortality as a primary endpoint.
Using data from the University HealthSystem Consortium from 2009 to 2013, we identified urgent/emergent hospital admissions for seven procedures representing 80% of the national burden of emergency general surgery. Patient characteristics and surgical outcomes were compared between cases that were performed on weekdays vs weekends.
Hospitals varied widely in the proportion of procedures performed on the weekend. Of the procedures examined, four had higher mortality for weekend cases (laparotomy, lysis of adhesions, partial colectomy, and small bowel resection; p < 0.01), while three did not (appendectomy, cholecystectomy, and peptic ulcer disease repair). Among the four procedures with increased weekend mortality, patients undergoing weekend procedures also had increased severity of illness and shorter time from admission to surgery (p < 0.01). Multivariate analysis adjusting for patient characteristics demonstrated independently higher mortality on weekends for these same four procedures (p < 0.01).
For the first time, we have identified specific emergency general surgery procedures that incur higher mortality when performed on weekends. This may be due to acute changes in patient status that require weekend surgery or indications for urgent procedures (ischemia, obstruction) compared to those without a weekend mortality difference (infection). Hospitals that perform weekend surgery must acknowledge and identify ways to manage this increased risk.
多项研究已经确定了手术结果的“周末效应”,但定义各不相同,其原因尚不清楚。我们的目的是使用死亡率作为主要终点,更好地描述急诊普通外科的周末效应。
利用 2009 年至 2013 年大学健康联盟(University HealthSystem Consortium)的数据,我们确定了 7 种手术的紧急/紧急入院情况,这些手术占全国急诊普通外科负担的 80%。比较了在工作日和周末进行手术的病例的患者特征和手术结果。
医院在周末进行手术的比例差异很大。在所检查的手术中,有 4 种手术的周末病例死亡率更高(剖腹术、粘连松解术、部分结肠切除术和小肠切除术;p<0.01),而另外 3 种手术则没有(阑尾切除术、胆囊切除术和消化性溃疡病修复术)。在周末死亡率增加的四个手术中,接受周末手术的患者病情严重程度也更高,从入院到手术的时间更短(p<0.01)。在调整了患者特征的多变量分析中,这四个手术的周末死亡率仍然更高(p<0.01)。
这是首次确定在周末进行手术时会导致更高死亡率的特定急诊普通外科手术。这可能是由于患者病情的急性变化需要进行周末手术,或者需要进行紧急手术(缺血、梗阻),而不是那些没有周末死亡率差异的手术(感染)。进行周末手术的医院必须认识到并找到管理这种增加风险的方法。