Adkins Zachary B, Malik Azeem T, Jain Nikhil, Yu Elizabeth, Kim Jeffery, Khan Safdar N
Department of Orthopaedics, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, OH.
Clin Spine Surg. 2019 Aug;32(7):285-294. doi: 10.1097/BSD.0000000000000785.
Systematic review.
To assess the impact of hospital volume on postoperative outcomes in spine surgery.
Several strategies have recently been proposed to optimize provider outcomes, such as regionalization to higher volume centers and setting volume benchmarks.
We performed a systematic review examining the association between hospital volume and spine surgery outcomes. To be included in the review, the study population had to include patients undergoing a primary or revision spinal procedure. These included anterior/posterior cervical fusions, anterior/posterior lumbar fusions, laminectomies, discectomies, spinal deformity surgeries, and surgery for spinal malignancies. We searched the Pubmed, OVID MEDLINE (1966-2018), Google Scholar, and Web of Science (1900-2018) databases in January 2018 using the search criteria ("Hospital volume" OR "volume" OR "volume-outcome" OR "volume outcome") AND ("spine" OR "spine surgery" OR "lumbar" OR "cervical" OR "decompression" OR "deformity" OR "fusions"). There were no restrictions placed on study design, publication date, or language. The studies were evaluated with respect to the quality of methodology as outlined by the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation system.
Twelve studies were included in the review. Studies were variable in defining hospital volume thresholds. Higher hospital volume was associated with statistically significant lower risks of postoperative complications, a shorter length of stay, lower cost of hospital stay, and a lower risk of readmissions and reoperations/revisions.
Our findings suggest a trend toward better outcomes for higher volume hospitals; however, further study needs to be carried out to define objective volume thresholds for specific spine surgeries for hospitals to use as a marker of proficiency.
系统评价。
评估医院手术量对脊柱手术术后结局的影响。
最近提出了几种优化医疗服务提供者结局的策略,例如将患者集中到手术量更高的中心以及设定手术量基准。
我们进行了一项系统评价,研究医院手术量与脊柱手术结局之间的关联。纳入本评价的研究人群必须包括接受初次或翻修脊柱手术的患者。这些手术包括前路/后路颈椎融合术、前路/后路腰椎融合术、椎板切除术、椎间盘切除术、脊柱畸形手术以及脊柱恶性肿瘤手术。我们于2018年1月在PubMed、OVID MEDLINE(1966 - 2018年)、谷歌学术和科学网(1900 - 2018年)数据库中进行检索,检索标准为(“医院手术量”或“手术量”或“手术量 - 结局”或“手术量结局”)以及(“脊柱”或“脊柱手术”或“腰椎”或“颈椎”或“减压”或“畸形”或“融合”)。对研究设计、发表日期或语言均无限制。根据推荐分级评估、制定与评价系统概述的方法学质量对这些研究进行评估。
本评价纳入了12项研究。各研究在定义医院手术量阈值方面存在差异。医院手术量越高,术后并发症风险在统计学上显著降低、住院时间缩短、住院费用降低以及再次入院和再次手术/翻修风险降低。
我们的研究结果表明手术量较高的医院有取得更好结局的趋势;然而,需要进一步开展研究以确定特定脊柱手术的客观手术量阈值,供医院用作专业水平的指标。