Dewan Michael C, Rattani Abbas, Baticulon Ronnie E, Faruque Serena, Johnson Walter D, Dempsey Robert J, Haglund Michael M, Alkire Blake C, Park Kee B, Warf Benjamin C, Shrime Mark G
1Global Neurosurgery Initiative, Program in Global Surgery and Social Change, Department of Global Health and Social Medicine.
2Department of Neurological Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville.
J Neurosurg. 2018 May 11;130(4):1098-1106. doi: 10.3171/2017.10.JNS17347. Print 2019 Apr 1.
The global magnitude of neurosurgical disease is unknown. The authors sought to estimate the surgical and consultative proportion of diseases commonly encountered by neurosurgeons, as well as surgeon case volume and perceived workload.
An electronic survey was sent to 193 neurosurgeons previously identified via a global surgeon mapping initiative. The survey consisted of three sections aimed at quantifying surgical incidence of neurological disease, consultation incidence, and surgeon demographic data. Surgeons were asked to estimate the proportion of 11 neurological disorders that, in an ideal world, would indicate either neurosurgical operation or neurosurgical consultation. Respondent surgeons indicated their confidence level in each estimate. Demographic and surgical practice characteristics-including case volume and perceived workload-were also captured.
Eighty-five neurosurgeons from 57 countries, representing all WHO regions and World Bank income levels, completed the survey. Neurological conditions estimated to warrant neurosurgical consultation with the highest frequency were brain tumors (96%), spinal tumors (95%), hydrocephalus (94%), and neural tube defects (92%), whereas stroke (54%), central nervous system infection (58%), and epilepsy (40%) carried the lowest frequency. Similarly, surgery was deemed necessary for an average of 88% cases of hydrocephalus, 82% of spinal tumors and neural tube defects, and 78% of brain tumors. Degenerative spine disease (42%), stroke (31%), and epilepsy (24%) were found to warrant surgical intervention less frequently. Confidence levels were consistently high among respondents (lower quartile > 70/100 for 90% of questions), and estimates did not vary significantly across WHO regions or among income levels. Surgeons reported performing a mean of 245 cases annually (median 190). On a 100-point scale indicating a surgeon's perceived workload (0-not busy, 100-overworked), respondents selected a mean workload of 75 (median 79).
With a high level of confidence and strong concordance, neurosurgeons estimated that the vast majority of patients with central nervous system tumors, hydrocephalus, or neural tube defects mandate neurosurgical involvement. A significant proportion of other common neurological diseases, such as traumatic brain and spinal injury, vascular anomalies, and degenerative spine disease, demand the attention of a neurosurgeon-whether via operative intervention or expert counsel. These estimates facilitate measurement of the expected annual volume of neurosurgical disease globally.
神经外科疾病的全球规模尚不清楚。作者试图估算神经外科医生常见疾病的手术和会诊比例,以及外科医生的病例数量和感知工作量。
通过一项全球外科医生mapping计划,向193名神经外科医生发送了电子调查问卷。该调查包括三个部分,旨在量化神经疾病的手术发病率、会诊发病率以及外科医生的人口统计学数据。要求外科医生估算在理想情况下11种神经疾病中需要进行神经外科手术或神经外科会诊的比例。参与调查的外科医生表明了他们对每项估算的信心水平。还收集了人口统计学和外科手术实践特征,包括病例数量和感知工作量。
来自57个国家的85名神经外科医生完成了调查,这些国家代表了世界卫生组织的所有区域和世界银行的所有收入水平。估计需要进行神经外科会诊频率最高的神经疾病是脑肿瘤(96%)、脊柱肿瘤(95%)、脑积水(94%)和神经管缺陷(92%),而中风(54%)、中枢神经系统感染(58%)和癫痫(40%)的会诊频率最低。同样,平均88%的脑积水病例、82%的脊柱肿瘤和神经管缺陷病例以及78%的脑肿瘤病例被认为需要进行手术。发现退行性脊柱疾病(42%)、中风(31%)和癫痫(24%)需要进行手术干预的频率较低。受访者的信心水平一直很高(90%的问题下四分位数>70/100),并且估算在世界卫生组织各区域或不同收入水平之间没有显著差异。外科医生报告称平均每年进行245例手术(中位数为190例)。在表示外科医生感知工作量的100分制量表上(0-不忙,100-工作过度),受访者选择的平均工作量为75(中位数为79)。
神经外科医生以高度的信心和强烈的一致性估计,绝大多数患有中枢神经系统肿瘤、脑积水或神经管缺陷的患者需要神经外科介入。其他一些常见的神经疾病,如创伤性脑和脊髓损伤、血管畸形和退行性脊柱疾病,很大一部分需要神经外科医生的关注——无论是通过手术干预还是专家咨询。这些估算有助于衡量全球神经外科疾病的预期年度数量。