Center for Value-based Care Research, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio; Department of Hospital Medicine, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio; Outcomes Research Consortium, Cleveland, Ohio.
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio.
J Arthroplasty. 2022 Nov;37(11):2128-2133. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2022.05.011. Epub 2022 May 11.
Joint arthroplasties are among the most commonly performed elective surgeries in the United States. Surgical outcomes are known to improve with volume but it is unclear whether this has led to consolidation among elective surgeries. We examined trends in volumes per surgeon and hospital to assess whether the known volume-outcome relationship has led to consolidation in elective joint arthroplasty and to determine if there exist volume thresholds above which outcomes do not change.
Among Medicare beneficiaries who underwent either total knee or total hip arthroplasty from 2009 through 2015, we described volume trends and used mixed-effect models to relate annual surgeon and hospital volumes with 30-day complications or mortality. We tested for optimal volume cut points at both the hospital and surgeon level.
Adjusted annual complication rates were inversely associated with volume for both procedures at both the surgeon level and hospital level, but there was minimal consolidation between 2009 and 2015. Complications no longer declined after volumes of each case exceeded 260 per year. The vast majority of cases (around 93% of hip and 88% of knee arthroplasties) were performed by surgeons operating at suboptimal volumes.
More than 2 decades after the volume-outcome relationship was established for joint arthroplasty, many cases continue to be performed by low-volume surgeons, with far more cases performed by surgeons operating at suboptimal volumes. Further improvement could be expected through consolidation at both the hospital and surgeon level, with a target of at least 260 cases per surgeon annually for each operation. Payers seem best-equipped to drive consolidation.
关节置换术是美国最常见的择期手术之一。已知手术效果随着手术量的增加而提高,但尚不清楚这是否导致了择期手术的集中化。我们研究了每位外科医生和医院的手术量趋势,以评估已知的手术量-效果关系是否导致了择期关节置换术的集中化,并确定是否存在手术量阈值,超过该阈值后效果不会改变。
在 2009 年至 2015 年间接受全膝关节或全髋关节置换术的 Medicare 受益人中,我们描述了手术量趋势,并使用混合效应模型将每年外科医生和医院的手术量与 30 天内的并发症或死亡率联系起来。我们在医院和外科医生两个层面上测试了最佳的手术量截止点。
调整后的年度并发症发生率与两种手术在外科医生和医院层面上的手术量呈反比关系,但在 2009 年至 2015 年间,集中化程度很小。每个病例的手术量超过 260 例/年后,并发症不再减少。绝大多数病例(约 93%的髋关节置换术和 88%的膝关节置换术)是由手术量不足的外科医生进行的。
在关节置换术的手术量-效果关系确立 20 多年后,许多病例仍由低手术量的外科医生进行,而更多的病例由手术量不足的外科医生进行。通过医院和外科医生两个层面的集中化,可以进一步提高效果,目标是每个手术每年至少有 260 例外科医生参与。支付方似乎最有能力推动集中化。