Mizushima Tsunekazu, Yamamoto Hiroyuki, Marubashi Shigeru, Kamiya Kinji, Wakabayashi Go, Miyata Hiroaki, Seto Yasuyuki, Doki Yuichiro, Mori Masaki
Department of Surgery Gastroenterological Surgery Graduate School of Medicine Osaka University Osaka Japan.
Department of Healthcare Quality Assessment Graduate School of Medicine The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan.
Ann Gastroenterol Surg. 2018 Apr 16;2(3):231-240. doi: 10.1002/ags3.12070. eCollection 2018 May.
Benchmarking has proven beneficial in improving the quality of surgery. Mortality rate is an objective indicator, of which the 30-day mortality rate is the most widely used. However, as a result of recent advances in medical care, the 30-day mortality rate may not cover overall surgery-related mortalities. We examined the significance and validity of the 30-day mortality rate as a quality indicator.
The present study was conducted on cancer surgeries of esophagectomy, total gastrectomy, distal gastrectomy, right hemicolectomy, low anterior resection, hepatectomy, and pancreaticoduodenectomy that were registered in the first halves of 2012, 2013 and 2014 in a Japanese nationwide large-scale database. This study examined the mortality curve for each surgical procedure, "sensitivity of surgery-related death" (capture ratio) at each time point between days 30-180, and the association between mortality within 30 days, mortality after 31 days, and preoperative, perioperative, and postoperative factors.
Surgery-related mortality rates of each surgical procedure were 0.6%-3.0%. Regarding 30-day mortality rates, only 38.7% (esophagectomy) to 53.3% (right hemicolectomy) of surgery-related mortalities were captured. The capture ratio of surgery-related deaths reached 90% or higher for 120-day to 150-day mortality rates. Factors associated with mortality rate within 30 days/after the 31st day were different, depending on the type of surgical procedure.
Thirty-day mortality rate is useful as a quality indicator, but is not necessarily sufficient for all surgical procedures. Quality of surgery may require evaluation by combining 30-day mortality rates with other indicators, depending on the surgical procedure.
基准评估已被证明有助于提高手术质量。死亡率是一个客观指标,其中30天死亡率是使用最广泛的。然而,由于近期医疗护理的进步,30天死亡率可能无法涵盖所有手术相关死亡情况。我们研究了30天死亡率作为质量指标的意义和有效性。
本研究针对2012年、2013年和2014年上半年在日本全国大型数据库中登记的食管癌切除术、全胃切除术、远端胃切除术、右半结肠切除术、低位前切除术、肝切除术和胰十二指肠切除术等癌症手术进行。本研究考察了每种手术的死亡率曲线、30至180天各时间点的“手术相关死亡敏感性”(捕获率),以及30天内死亡率、31天后死亡率与术前、围手术期和术后因素之间的关联。
每种手术的手术相关死亡率为0.6% - 3.0%。关于30天死亡率,仅捕获了38.7%(食管癌切除术)至53.3%(右半结肠切除术)的手术相关死亡病例。对于120天至150天的死亡率,手术相关死亡的捕获率达到90%或更高。30天内/第31天之后与死亡率相关的因素因手术类型而异。
30天死亡率作为质量指标是有用的,但不一定适用于所有手术。根据手术类型,手术质量可能需要通过将30天死亡率与其他指标相结合来评估。