Hospital Volume and Operative Mortality for General Surgery Operations Performed Emergently in Adults

被引:29
作者
Becher, Robert D. [1 ]
DeWane, Michael P. [1 ]
Sukumar, Nitin [2 ]
Stolar, Marilyn J. [2 ]
Gill, Thomas M. [3 ]
Maung, Adrian A. [1 ]
Schuster, Kevin M. [1 ]
Davis, Kimberly A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Yale Sch Med, Sect Gen Surg Trauma & Surg Crit Care, Dept Surg, 330 Cedar St,BB 310, New Haven, CT 06520 USA
[2] Yale Sch Publ Hlth, Yale Ctr Analyt Sci, New Haven, CT USA
[3] Yale Sch Med, Sect Geriatr, Dept Internal Med, New Haven, CT 06520 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
benchmarks; emergency general surgery; high-volume hospitals; nontrauma surgical emergencies; regionalization; volume-to-outcomes; QUALITY IMPROVEMENT; TRAUMA SYSTEM; RISK-FACTOR; OUTCOMES; IMPACT; CARE; PERFECT; CENTERS; RATES;
D O I
10.1097/SLA.0000000000003232
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: This study aimed to answer 2 questions: first, to what degree does hospital operative volume affect mortality for adult patients undergoing 1 of 10 common emergency general surgery (EGS) operations? Second, at what hospital operative volume threshold will nearly all patients undergoing an emergency operation realize the average mortality risk? Background: Nontrauma surgical emergencies are an underappreciated public health crisis in the United States; redefining where such emergencies are managed may improve outcomes. The field of trauma surgery established regionalized systems of care in part because studies demonstrated a clear relationship between hospital volume and survival for traumatic emergencies. Such a relationship has not been well-studied for nontrauma surgical emergencies. Methods: Retrospective cohort study of all acute care hospitals in California performing nontrauma surgical emergencies. We employed a novel use of an ecological analysis with beta regression to investigate the relationship between hospital operative volume and mortality. Results: A total of 425 acute care hospitals in California performed 165,123 EGS operations. Risk-adjusted mortality significantly decreased as volume increased for all 10 EGS operations (P< 0.001 for each); the relative magnitude of this inverse relationship differed substantially by procedure. Hospital operative volume thresholds were defined and varied by operation: from 75 cases over 2 years for cholecystectomy to 7 cases for umbilical hernia repair. Conclusions: Survival rates for nontrauma surgical emergencies were improved when operations were performed at higher-volume hospitals. The use of ecological analysis is widely applicable to the field of surgical outcomes research.
引用
收藏
页码:288 / 303
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Effect of Hospital Volume on In-hospital Morbidity and Mortality Following Pancreatic Surgery in Germany [J].
Krautz, Christian ;
Nimptsch, Ulrike ;
Weber, Georg F. ;
Mansky, Thomas ;
Gruetzmann, Robert .
ANNALS OF SURGERY, 2018, 267 (03) :411-417
[22]   Geographic Variation in the Utilization of and Mortality After Emergency General Surgery Operations in the Northeastern and Southeastern United States [J].
Becher, Robert D. ;
Jin, Lan ;
Warren, Joshua L. ;
Gill, Thomas M. ;
DeWane, Michael P. ;
Davis, Kimberly A. ;
Zhang, Yawei .
ANNALS OF SURGERY, 2022, 275 (02) :340-347
[23]   Acute kidney injury is independently associated with mortality and resource use after emergency general surgery operations [J].
Sanaiha, Yas ;
Kavianpour, Behdad ;
Dobaria, Vishal ;
Mardock, Alexandra L. ;
Rudasill, Sarah ;
Lyons, Robert ;
Benharash, Peyman .
SURGERY, 2020, 167 (02) :328-334
[24]   Variation in Hospital Mortality After Complex Cancer Surgery: Patient, Volume, Hospital or Social Determinants? [J].
Munir, Muhammad Musaab ;
Woldesenbet, Selamawit ;
Endo, Yutaka ;
Dillhoff, Mary ;
Cloyd, Jordan ;
Ejaz, Aslam ;
Pawlik, Timothy M. .
ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY, 2024, 31 (05) :2856-2866
[25]   In-hospital mortality after stomach cancer surgery in Spain and relationship with hospital volume of interventions [J].
Bare, Marisa ;
Cabrol, Joan ;
Real, Jordi ;
Navarro, Gemma ;
Campo, Rafel ;
Pericay, Carles ;
Sarria, Antonio .
BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2009, 9
[26]   Impact of Hospital Volume on Postoperative Complications and In-Hospital Mortality After Musculoskeletal Tumor Surgery Analysis of a National Administrative Database [J].
Ogura, Koichi ;
Yasunaga, Hideo ;
Horiguchi, Hiromasa ;
Ohe, Kazuhiko ;
Shinoda, Yusuke ;
Tanaka, Sakae ;
Kawano, Hirotaka .
JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME, 2013, 95A (18) :1684-1691
[27]   Hospital Volume and Patient Outcomes in Hepato-Pancreatico-Biliary Surgery: Is Assessing Differences in Mortality Enough? [J].
Schneider, Eric B. ;
Ejaz, Aslam ;
Spolverato, Gaya ;
Hirose, Kenzo ;
Makary, Martin A. ;
Wolfgang, Christopher L. ;
Ahuja, Nita ;
Weiss, Matthew ;
Pawlik, Timothy M. .
JOURNAL OF GASTROINTESTINAL SURGERY, 2014, 18 (12) :2105-2115
[28]   Volume and in-hospital mortality after emergency abdominal surgery: a national population-based study [J].
Nally, Deirdre M. ;
Sorensen, Jan ;
Valentelyte, Gintare ;
Hammond, Laura ;
McNamara, Deborah ;
Kavanagh, Dara O. ;
Mealy, Ken .
BMJ OPEN, 2019, 9 (11)
[29]   Mortality and complication management after surgery for colorectal cancer depending on the DKG minimum amounts for hospital volume [J].
Diers, Johannes ;
Baum, Philip ;
Matthes, Harald ;
Germer, Christoph-Thomas ;
Wiegering, Armin .
EJSO, 2021, 47 (04) :850-857
[30]   Impact of Volume on Mortality and Hospital Stay After Lung Cancer Surgery in a Single-Payer System [J].
Pollock, Clare ;
Soder, Stephan ;
Ezer, Nicole ;
Ferraro, Pasquale ;
Lafontaine, Edwin ;
Martin, Jocelyne ;
Nasir, Basil ;
Liberman, Moishe .
ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY, 2022, 114 (05) :1834-1841