Department of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Centre, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Centre, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Surgery, George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA.
Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg. 2018 May;55(5):714-719. doi: 10.1016/j.ejvs.2018.02.026. Epub 2018 Mar 31.
OBJECTIVE/BACKGROUND: While higher lead surgeon volume has been associated with lower mortality following open abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair, little is known about the impact of using an attending surgeon as assistant surgeon. The aim of this study was to determine whether the presence of an assistant surgeon, particularly a high volume assistant, mitigates the relationship between lead surgeon volume and outcomes.
All Medicare beneficiaries who underwent intact, open AAA repair between 2003 and 2008 were evaluated and nested regression models were constructed to evaluate the relationship between surgeon and assistant volume and peri-operative mortality, adjusting for comorbid conditions and hospital volume.
In total 28,590 repairs were studied, of which 19,284 (67.5%) were performed by a single surgeon and 9306 (32.5%) included an assistant surgeon. Of cases with an assistant, 12.3% included a high volume assistant surgeon. Lower volume surgeons more frequently used an assistant (lead surgeon Q1 volume: 40%; Q2: 36%; Q3: 34%; Q4: 29%; Q5: 27% [p < .01]). In cases with no assistant, adjusted peri-operative mortality varied monotonically with surgeon volume (Q1: 4.7%; Q2: 4.4%; Q3: 4.1%; Q4: 3.3%; Q5: 3.2%). However, the use of a high or a low volume assistant surgeon, compared with no attending surgeon as assistant, was not associated with lower peri-operative mortality in any lead surgeon volume quintile, even among those operations performed by the lowest volume lead surgeons.
Employing an assistant surgeon does not improve outcomes amongst any quintile of volume of the lead surgeon. As surgeons perform fewer open AAA repairs in the modern era, these data imply that even the help of a high volume assistant surgeon may not mitigate the detrimental effect of a lower volume surgeon.
目的/背景:虽然较高的主刀医师手术量与开放式腹主动脉瘤(AAA)修复术后死亡率降低相关,但对于使用主治医生作为助手医生的影响知之甚少。本研究旨在确定助手医生的存在,特别是高容量助手,是否可以减轻主刀医师手术量与手术结果之间的关系。
评估了所有在 2003 年至 2008 年间接受完整的开放式 AAA 修复的 Medicare 受益人,并构建嵌套回归模型,以评估医师和助手的手术量与围手术期死亡率之间的关系,同时调整合并症和医院容量。
共研究了 28590 例修复手术,其中 19284 例(67.5%)由单一外科医生完成,9306 例(32.5%)包括助手外科医生。在有助手的病例中,12.3%的病例有高容量助手外科医生。低容量外科医生更频繁地使用助手(主刀医生 Q1 容量:40%;Q2:36%;Q3:34%;Q4:29%;Q5:27%[p<.01])。在没有助手的情况下,调整后的围手术期死亡率随外科医生的手术量呈单调变化(Q1:4.7%;Q2:4.4%;Q3:4.1%;Q4:3.3%;Q5:3.2%)。然而,与没有主治医生作为助手相比,使用高或低容量助手外科医生,在任何主刀医生手术量五分位组中,都与较低的围手术期死亡率无关,即使在手术量最低的主刀医生中也是如此。
在任何主刀医师手术量五分位组中,使用助手外科医生并不能改善手术结果。随着外科医生在现代时代进行的开放式 AAA 修复手术越来越少,这些数据表明,即使是高容量助手外科医生的帮助,也可能无法减轻低容量外科医生的不利影响。