Department of Neurosurgery, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
McKenna EpiLog Fellowship in Population Health, at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
World Neurosurg. 2023 Jun;174:e144-e151. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2023.03.023. Epub 2023 Mar 10.
There are limited data evaluating the outcomes of attending neurosurgeons with different types of first assistants. This study considers a common neurosurgical procedure (single-level, posterior-only lumbar fusion surgery) and examines whether attending surgeons deliver equal patient outcomes, regardless of the type of first assistant (resident physician vs. nonphysician surgical assistant [NPSA]), among otherwise exact-matched patients.
The authors retrospectively analyzed 3395 adult patients undergoing single-level, posterior-only lumbar fusion at a single academic medical center. Primary outcomes included readmissions, emergency department visits, reoperation, and mortality within 30 and 90 days after surgery. Secondary outcome measures included discharge disposition, length of stay, and length of surgery. Coarsened exact matching was used to match patients on key demographics and baseline characteristics known to independently affect neurosurgical outcomes.
Among exact-matched patients (n = 1402), there was no significant difference in adverse postsurgical events (readmission, emergency department visits, reoperation, or mortality) within 30 days or 90 days of the index operation between patients who had resident physicians and those who had NPSAs as first assistants. Patients who had resident physicians as first assistants demonstrated a longer length of stay (mean: 100.0 vs. 87.4 hours, P < 0.001) and a shorter duration of surgery (mean: 187.4 vs. 213.8 minutes, P < 0.001). There was no significant difference between the two groups in the percentage of patients discharged home.
For single-level posterior spinal fusion, in the setting described, there are no differences in short-term patient outcomes delivered by attending surgeons assisted by resident physicians versus NPSAs.
评估具有不同类型第一助手的神经外科医生的治疗效果的数据有限。本研究考虑了一种常见的神经外科手术(单节段后路腰椎融合术),并研究了在其他条件完全匹配的患者中,主治医生是否能够提供相同的治疗效果,而不论第一助手的类型(住院医师与非医师手术助手[NPSA])如何。
作者回顾性分析了在一家学术医学中心接受单节段后路腰椎融合术的 3395 名成年患者。主要结局包括术后 30 天和 90 天内的再入院、急诊就诊、再次手术和死亡率。次要结局指标包括出院去向、住院时间和手术时间。使用粗化精确匹配法根据已知会独立影响神经外科治疗效果的关键人口统计学和基线特征对患者进行匹配。
在精确匹配的患者(n=1402)中,在手术 30 天和 90 天内,具有住院医师和 NPSA 作为第一助手的患者之间,在术后不良事件(再入院、急诊就诊、再次手术或死亡)方面无显著差异。具有住院医师作为第一助手的患者的住院时间更长(平均:100.0 小时 vs. 87.4 小时,P<0.001),手术时间更短(平均:187.4 分钟 vs. 213.8 分钟,P<0.001)。两组患者中,出院回家的患者比例无显著差异。
对于单节段后路脊柱融合术,在描述的情况下,主治医生在接受住院医师或 NPSA 协助下,在短期患者治疗效果方面没有差异。