Section of Neurosurgery, Department of Surgery, Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan.
Neurology and Neurosurgery Nursing, Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan.
World Neurosurg. 2021 Nov;155:e156-e167. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2021.08.026. Epub 2021 Aug 14.
Low-middle-income countries (LMICs) share a substantial proportion of global surgical complications. This is compounded by the seemingly deficient documentation of postsurgical complications and the lack of a national average for comparison. In this context, the implementation of the American College of Surgeons (ACS) National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) that compares hospital performance based on postsurgical complication data provided by a wide array of centers, could be a major initiative in a resource-challenged setting. Implementation of the NSQIP has provenly mitigated postoperative morbidity and mortality across many centers all over the world. To our knowledge, this report is the first from an LMIC to report its postoperative neurosurgical complications in comparison with international benchmarks.
Our hospital joined the NSQIP in 2019. Through a standardized ACS protocol, ACS-trained surgical clinical reviewers (SCRs) reviewed and extracted data from randomly assigned neurosurgical patients' medical records from preoperative to postoperative (30-day) data using validated, standardized data definitions. SCRs entered deidentified data in an online Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act web-based secure platform. The validated data were then consigned to the ACS NSQIP head office in the United States where the data were analyzed and compared with similar data from other centers registered with the NSQIP. In this way, our hospital was rated for each of the variables related to postsurgical complications after both spinal and cranial procedures, and the results were sent back to us in the form of text, tables, and graphs.
Our initial report suggested a relatively higher odds ratio for sepsis and readmissions after spinal procedures at our hospital, and a similarly higher odds ratio for morbidity, sepsis, urinary tract infection, and surgical site infection for cranial procedures. For these variables, our hospital fell in the needs improvement category of the NSQIP. For the rest of the variables studied for both spinal and cranial procedures, the hospital fell in the as expected category of the NSQIP.
Implementation of the NSQIP is an important first step in creating a culture of transparency, safety, and quality. This is the first report of NSQIP implementation in an LMIC, and we have shown comparable results to developed countries.
中低收入国家(LMICs)在全球手术并发症中占很大比例。这是由于术后并发症的记录似乎存在缺陷,而且缺乏国家平均水平作为比较。在这种情况下,实施美国外科医师学院(ACS)国家外科手术质量改进计划(NSQIP),根据广泛的中心提供的术后并发症数据来比较医院的绩效,可能是资源匮乏环境中的一项重要举措。在世界许多中心,NSQIP 的实施已被证明降低了术后发病率和死亡率。据我们所知,这是第一个来自 LMIC 的报告,比较了国际基准的术后神经外科并发症。
我们医院于 2019 年加入 NSQIP。通过标准化的 ACS 协议,ACS 培训的外科临床审查员(SCR)使用经过验证的标准化数据定义,从术前到术后(30 天)数据中审查和提取随机分配的神经外科患者病历中的数据。SCR 会将匿名数据输入在线的符合《健康保险携带和责任法案》(HIPAA)的安全网络平台。经过验证的数据随后被寄往美国的 ACS NSQIP 总部,在那里对数据进行分析,并与 NSQIP 注册的其他中心的类似数据进行比较。通过这种方式,我们医院根据与脊柱和颅部手术后并发症相关的各个变量进行了评分,结果以文本、表格和图表的形式反馈给我们。
我们的初步报告表明,我们医院脊柱手术后脓毒症和再入院的优势比相对较高,而颅部手术后发病率、脓毒症、尿路感染和手术部位感染的优势比也较高。对于这些变量,我们医院属于 NSQIP 的需要改进类别。对于脊柱和颅部手术研究的其余变量,医院属于 NSQIP 的预期类别。
实施 NSQIP 是建立透明度、安全性和质量文化的重要第一步。这是第一个在 LMIC 实施 NSQIP 的报告,我们已经展示了与发达国家相当的结果。