From the Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT (Dr. Ottesen, Dr. Amick, Dr. Kirwin, Dr. Mercier, Dr. Brand, Dr. Frumberg, Dr. Grauer, and Dr. Rubin), and the Harvard Combined Orthopaedic Residency Program, Boston, MA (Dr. Ottesen).
J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev. 2024 Jan 22;8(1). doi: 10.5435/JAAOSGlobal-D-22-00239. eCollection 2024 Jan 1.
The effect of orthopaedic fellowship subspecialization on surgical complications for patients with supracondylar fracture is unknown. This study seeks to compare the effect of subspecialty training on supracondylar fracture complications.
The American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery Part II Examination Case List database was reviewed for all supracondylar fractures from 1999 to 2016. Procedures were divided by fellowship subspecialty (trauma, pediatric, or other) and case volume and assessed by surgeon-reported surgical complications. Predictive factors of complications were analyzed using a binary multivariate logistic regression.
Of 10,961 supracondylar fractures identified, 53.47% were done by pediatric fellowship-trained surgeons. Pediatric-trained surgeons had fewer surgical complications compared with their trauma or other trained peers (4.54%, 5.67%, and 6.24%; P = 0.001). Treatment by pediatric-trained surgeons reduced surgical complications (OR = 0.79, 95% CI: 0.66 to 0.94; P = 0.010), whereas increased case volume (31+ cases) showed no significant effect (OR = 0.79, 95% CI: 0.62 to 1.02; P = 0.068). Patient sex, age, and year of procedure did not affect complication rates, while those treated in the Southeast region of the United States and those with a complex fracture type were at increased odds.
Treatment of supracondylar fractures by pediatric-trained surgeons demonstrates reduced surgeon-reported complications compared with their other fellowship-trained counterparts, whereas case volume does not. This suggests the value of fellowship training beyond pertinent surgical caseload among pediatric-trained surgeons and may lie in targeted education efforts.
矫形外科专科医师培训对髁上骨折患者手术并发症的影响尚不清楚。本研究旨在比较专业培训对髁上骨折并发症的影响。
对 1999 年至 2016 年美国骨科医师协会委员会第二部分考试病例清单数据库中的所有髁上骨折进行了回顾。根据专科医师培训(创伤、儿科或其他)和手术量将手术分为不同组别,并通过外科医生报告的手术并发症进行评估。使用二元多变量逻辑回归分析并发症的预测因素。
在确定的 10961 例髁上骨折中,53.47%由儿科专科医师培训的外科医生完成。与创伤或其他专科培训的同行相比,儿科培训的外科医生的手术并发症更少(4.54%、5.67%和 6.24%;P=0.001)。由儿科培训的外科医生治疗可减少手术并发症(OR=0.79,95%CI:0.66 至 0.94;P=0.010),而手术量增加(31 例以上)则无显著效果(OR=0.79,95%CI:0.62 至 1.02;P=0.068)。患者性别、年龄和手术年份均不影响并发症发生率,而在美国东南部地区接受治疗和骨折类型复杂的患者发生并发症的几率增加。
与其他专科培训的同行相比,接受儿科培训的外科医生治疗髁上骨折可降低外科医生报告的并发症发生率,而手术量则没有。这表明儿科培训的外科医生除了相关手术量外,专科培训还有价值,可能在于有针对性的教育努力。