Obey Mitchel R, Lamplot Joseph, Nielsen Ena D, Andras Lindsay M, Mignemi Megan, Sawyer Jeffrey, Flynn John M, Albanese Stephen A, Hosseinzadeh Pooya
Washington University, St. Louis, MO.
Children's Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA.
J Pediatr Orthop. 2019 Jan;39(1):e71-e76. doi: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000001276.
Pediatric orthopaedic surgery has become increasingly subspecialized over the past decade. The purpose of this study was to analyze the volume of pediatric sports medicine cases performed by surgeons applying for the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgeons (ABOS) Part II certification exam over the past decade, comparing caseloads according to the type(s) of fellowship completed.
The ABOS database was reviewed for all surgeons applying for the ABOS Part II certification exam from 2004 to 2014. Fellowship training of the candidates was recorded as Pediatrics, Sports, and Dual-Fellowship (fellowship in both Pediatrics and Sports). All other candidates were categorized as "Other". A total of 102,424 pediatric cases (patients below 18 years) were reviewed to identify sports medicine cases performed by CPT code. Multiple linear regression and Mann-Whitney U tests were used to determine trends in case volume overall and according to fellowship training for all patients, patients ≥13 and patients <13. One-way ANOVA testing was used to compare multiple means followed by multiple post hoc comparisons using a Tukey all pairwise approach using SPSS.
A total of 14,636 pediatric sports medicine cases were performed. There was an increase in the number of sports medicine cases performed in patients <13 (117.5±31.8 from 2004-2009 to 212.4±70.1 from 2010-2014, P=0.035; r=0.743, P=0.0007). The number of Pediatrics (r=0.601, P=0.005), Sports (r=0.741, P=0.0007) and Dual-Fellowship candidates increased (r=0.600, P=0.005) from 2004-2014. Dual-Fellowship surgeons performed 21.4% of pediatric sports medicine cases in 2014 when compared to 2.1% in 2004 (919% increase). As a group, the number of pediatric sports cases performed by Dual-Fellowship (r=0.630, P=0.004) and Sports (r=0.567, P=0.007) candidates has increased, while the number performed by "Other" candidates has decreased (r=0.758, P=0.0005). Per surgeon, Dual-Fellowship candidates performed a greater number of pediatric sports cases per collection period (36.5±9.18) than Pediatrics (6.71±0.94), Sports (5.99±0.46), and "Other" (1.21±0.15, P<0.0001 for each) candidates from 2004 to 2014.
Over the past decade operative sports injuries have increased in children with a similar increase in the number of orthopedic surgeons specializing in pediatric sports medicine. On a per surgeon basis, these dual fellowship-trained candidates have performed on average five times the number of pediatric sports medicine cases compared to all other ABOS Part II candidates. These trends may point towards the development of a new subspecialty of pediatric sports medicine among orthopedic surgeons.
Level IV-Retrospective Database Review.
在过去十年中,小儿骨科手术越来越专业化。本研究的目的是分析过去十年申请美国骨科医师协会(ABOS)第二部分认证考试的外科医生所做的小儿运动医学病例数量,并根据完成的 fellowship 类型比较病例数。
回顾了 2004 年至 2014 年申请 ABOS 第二部分认证考试的所有外科医生的 ABOS 数据库。将候选人的 fellowship 培训记录为儿科、运动医学以及双重 fellowship(儿科和运动医学双 fellowship)。所有其他候选人归类为“其他”。共审查了 102424 例儿科病例(18 岁以下患者),以通过 CPT 编码识别运动医学病例。使用多元线性回归和 Mann-Whitney U 检验来确定总体病例数量的趋势以及根据所有患者、≥13 岁患者和<13 岁患者的 fellowship 培训情况确定趋势。使用单因素方差分析来比较多个均值,随后使用 SPSS 中的 Tukey 全两两比较方法进行多个事后比较。
共进行了 14636 例小儿运动医学病例。<13 岁患者的运动医学病例数量有所增加(从 2004 - 2009 年的 117.5±31.8 增加到 2010 - 2014 年的 212.4±70.1,P = 0.035;r = 0.743,P = 0.0007)。2004 - 2014 年,儿科(r = 0.601,P = 0.005)、运动医学(r = 0.741,P = 0.0007)和双重 fellowship 候选人的数量增加(r = 0.600,P = 0.005)。与 2004 年的 2.1%相比,2014 年双重 fellowship 外科医生完成了 21.4%的小儿运动医学病例(增加了 919%)。总体而言,双重 fellowship(r = 0.630,P = 0.004)和运动医学(r = 0.567,P = 0.007)候选人所做的儿科运动病例数量增加,而“其他”候选人所做的数量减少(r = 0.758,P = 0.0005)。从 2004 年到 2014 年,每位外科医生中,双重 fellowship 候选人在每个收集期内进行的儿科运动病例数(36.5±9.18)多于儿科(6.71±0.94)、运动医学(5.99±0.46)和“其他”(1.21±0.15,每组 P<0.0001)候选人。
在过去十年中,儿童运动损伤手术病例增加,专门从事小儿运动医学的骨科医生数量也有类似增加。每位外科医生中,这些接受双重 fellowship 培训的候选人所做的小儿运动医学病例平均数量是所有其他 ABOS 第二部分候选人的五倍。这些趋势可能表明骨科医生中正在形成一个新的小儿运动医学亚专业。
IV 级 - 回顾性数据库审查。