National Clinician Scholars Program at the Institute for Healthcare Policy & Innovation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Department of Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Cancer. 2018 Feb 15;124(4):826-832. doi: 10.1002/cncr.31120. Epub 2017 Nov 17.
Surgical resection is a cornerstone of curative-intent therapy for patients with solid organ malignancies. With increasing attention paid to the costs of surgical care, there is a new focus on variations in the costs of cancer surgery. This study evaluated the potential interactive effect of hospital quality and patient risk on expenditures for cancer resections.
With 100% Medicare claim data for 2010-2013, patients aged 65 to 99 years who had undergone cancer resection were identified. Medicare payments were calculated for the surgical episode from the index admission through 30 days after discharge. Risk- and reliability-adjusted hospital rates of serious complications and mortality within 30 days of the index operation were assessed to categorize high- and low-quality hospitals.
There was no difference in patient characteristics between the highest and lowest quality hospitals. There were substantial increases in expenditures for procedures performed at the lowest quality hospitals for each procedure. Increased expenditures at the lowest quality hospitals were found for all patients, but they were highest for the highest risk patients. At low-quality hospitals, low-risk patients undergoing pancreatectomy had payments of $29,080, whereas high-risk patients had average payments of $62,687; this was a difference of $33,607 per patient episode.
Total episode expenditures for cancer resections were lower when care was delivered at low-complication, high-quality hospitals. Expenditure differences were particularly large for high-risk patients, and this suggests that the selective referral of high-risk patients to high-quality centers may be an effective strategy for optimizing value in cancer surgery. Cancer 2018;124:826-32. © 2017 American Cancer Society.
手术切除是实体恶性肿瘤患者治愈性治疗的基石。随着对手术护理成本的关注度不断提高,人们开始关注癌症手术成本的差异。本研究评估了医院质量和患者风险对癌症切除术支出的潜在交互影响。
利用 2010 年至 2013 年的 100%医疗保险索赔数据,确定了年龄在 65 岁至 99 岁之间接受癌症切除术的患者。从索引入院到出院后 30 天,计算手术期间的医疗保险支付额。评估术后 30 天内严重并发症和死亡率的风险和可靠性调整后的医院发生率,以对高、低质量医院进行分类。
最高质量和最低质量医院的患者特征无差异。在每个程序中,在最低质量医院进行的程序的支出都有实质性增加。在最低质量医院,所有患者的支出都有所增加,但风险最高的患者增幅最大。在低质量医院,低风险接受胰切除术的患者的支付额为 29080 美元,而高风险患者的平均支付额为 62687 美元;每个患者的差异为 33607 美元。
在低并发症、高质量医院进行癌症切除术的总手术费用较低。对于高风险患者,支出差异特别大,这表明将高风险患者选择性转诊到高质量中心可能是优化癌症手术价值的有效策略。癌症 2018;124:826-32。©2017 美国癌症协会。