Veith Jacob, Collier Willem, Simpson Andrew, Magno-Padron David, Mast Bruce, Murphy Robert X, Agarwal Jayant, Kwok Alvin
Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla.
Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2020 May 27;8(5):e2841. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000002841. eCollection 2020 May.
Both the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) and the American Society of Plastic Surgeons Tracking Operations and Outcomes for Plastic Surgeons (TOPS) databases track 30-day outcomes.
Using the 2008-2016 TOPS and NSQIP databases, we compared patient characteristics and postoperative outcomes for 5 common plastic surgery procedures. A weighted TOPS population was used to mirror the NSQIP population in clinical and demographic characteristics to compare postoperative outcomes.
We identified 154,181 cases. Compared with NSQIP patients, TOPS patients were more likely to be younger (47.9 versus 50.0 years), have American Society of Anesthesiologists class I-II (92.1% versus 74.6%), be outpatient (66.0% versus 49.3%), and be smokers (18.7% versus 11.7%). TOPS had extensive missing data: body mass index (40.6%), American Society of Anesthesiologists class (34.9%), diabetes (39.3%), and smoking status (37.2%). NSQIP was missing <1% of all shared categories except race (15.6%). The entire TOPS cohort versus only TOPS patients without missing data had higher rates of dehiscence (5.1% versus 3.5%) and infection (2.1% versus 1.7%). TOPS versus NSQIP patients had higher dehiscence rates (5.1% versus 1.0%) but lower rates of return to the operating room (3.1% versus 6.6%), infection (2.1% versus 3.0%), and medical complications (0.3% versus 2.2%). Nonweighted and weighted TOPS cohorts had similar 30-day outcomes.
NSQIP and TOPS populations are different in characteristics and outcomes, likely due to differences in collection methodology and the types physicians using the databases. The strengths of each dataset can be used together for research and quality improvement.
美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进计划(NSQIP)和美国整形外科医师学会整形外科医师手术及结果跟踪(TOPS)数据库均跟踪30天的结果。
利用2008 - 2016年的TOPS和NSQIP数据库,我们比较了5种常见整形手术的患者特征和术后结果。采用加权的TOPS人群来反映NSQIP人群的临床和人口统计学特征,以比较术后结果。
我们共识别出154,181例病例。与NSQIP患者相比,TOPS患者更可能较年轻(47.9岁对50.0岁),美国麻醉医师协会分级为I - II级(92.1%对74.6%),为门诊患者(66.0%对49.3%),且为吸烟者(18.7%对11.7%)。TOPS有大量缺失数据:体重指数(40.6%)、美国麻醉医师协会分级(34.9%)、糖尿病(39.3%)和吸烟状况(37.2%)。NSQIP除种族(15.6%)外,所有共享类别缺失数据均<1%。整个TOPS队列与仅无缺失数据的TOPS患者相比,裂开率(5.1%对3.5%)和感染率(2.1%对1.7%)更高。TOPS患者与NSQIP患者相比,裂开率更高(5.1%对1.0%),但返回手术室的比率更低(3.1%对6.6%)、感染率更低(2.1%对3.0%)以及医疗并发症发生率更低(0.3%对2.2%)。未加权和加权的TOPS队列30天结果相似。
NSQIP和TOPS人群在特征和结果方面存在差异,可能是由于收集方法以及使用数据库的医师类型不同。每个数据集的优势可共同用于研究和质量改进。