Division of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Virginia Cardiac Services Quality Initiative, Virginia Beach, Va.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2020 Feb;159(2):540-550. doi: 10.1016/j.jtcvs.2018.12.107. Epub 2019 Feb 11.
Transfer from hospital to hospital for cardiac surgery represents a large portion of some clinical practices. Previous literature in other surgical fields has shown worse outcomes for transferred patients. We hypothesized that transferred patients would be higher risk and demonstrate worse outcomes than those admitted through the emergency department.
All patients undergoing cardiac operations with a Society of Thoracic Surgeons Predicted Risk of Mortality were evaluated from a multicenter, statewide Society of Thoracic Surgeons database. Only patients requiring admission before surgery were included. Patients were stratified by admission through the emergency department or in transfer. Transfers were further stratified by the cardiothoracic surgery capabilities at the referring center.
A total of 13,094 patients met the inclusion criteria of admission before surgery. This included 7582 (57.9%) transfers, of which 502 (6.6%) were referred from cardiac centers. Compared with emergency department admissions, transfers had increased hospital costs despite lower operative risk (Predicted Risk of Mortality 1.5% vs 1.6%, P < .01) and equivalent postoperative morbidity (15.6% vs 15.3% P = .63). In risk-adjusted analysis, transfer status was not independently associated with worse outcomes. Patients transferred from centers that perform cardiac surgery are higher risk than general transfers (Predicted Risk of Mortality 2.5% vs 1.5, P < .01), but specialized care results in excellent risk-adjusted outcomes (observed/expected: mortality 0.81; morbidity or mortality 0.90).
Transfer patients have similar rates of postoperative complications but increased resource use compared with patients admitted through the emergency department. Patients transferred from centers that perform cardiac surgery represent a particularly high-risk subgroup.
心脏手术的院内转院代表了一些临床实践的很大一部分。其他外科领域的先前文献表明,转院患者的预后更差。我们假设转院患者的风险更高,并且其预后比通过急诊入院的患者更差。
从一个多中心、全州范围的胸外科医师学会(STS)数据库中评估了所有接受心脏手术且 STS 预测死亡率的患者。仅包括术前需要入院的患者。根据通过急诊或转院入院对患者进行分层。根据转诊中心的心胸外科能力对转院患者进一步分层。
共有 13094 名患者符合术前入院的纳入标准。其中包括 7582 例(57.9%)转院患者,其中 502 例(6.6%)来自心脏中心。与急诊入院相比,尽管手术风险较低(预测死亡率为 1.5%比 1.6%,P<.01)且术后发病率相当(15.6%比 15.3%,P=.63),但转院患者的住院费用却有所增加。在风险调整分析中,转院状态与较差的预后无关。与一般转院患者相比,从进行心脏手术的中心转院的患者风险更高(预测死亡率为 2.5%比 1.5%,P<.01),但专门的治疗可带来出色的风险调整预后(实际/预期死亡率为 0.81;发病率或死亡率为 0.90)。
与通过急诊入院的患者相比,转院患者术后并发症发生率相似,但资源使用增加。从进行心脏手术的中心转院的患者代表了一个风险特别高的亚组。