Inhalt des Dokuments
Complex gastric surgery in Germany - is centralization beneficial? Observational study using national hospital discharge data.
Autor | Nimptsch
U, Haist T, Gockel I, Mansky T, Lorenz
D |
Journal | Langenbecks
Arch Surg 2019; 404(1):93-101 doi.org/10.1007/s00423-018-1742-6 [1] |
Abstract
Purpose
This observational study explored the association between
hospital volume and short-term outcome following gastric resections
for non-bariatric indication, aiming to contribute to the discussion
on centralization of complex visceral surgery in Germany.
Methods
Based on complete national hospital discharge data from 2010
to 2015, the association between hospital volume and in-hospital
mortality was evaluated according to volume quintiles and volume
deciles. Case-mix differences regarding surgical indication, age,
sex, and comorbidities were considered for risk adjustment. In
addition, rates of major complications and failure to rescue were
analyzed across hospital volume categories.
Results
Inpatient episodes (72,528) with gastric resection were
analyzed. Risk-adjusted mortality in patients treated in very low
volume hospitals (median volume of 5 surgeries per year) was higher
(12.0% [95% CI 11.4 to 12.5]) compared to those treated in very high
volume hospitals (50 surgeries per year; 10.6% [10.0 to 11.1]).
Failure to rescue patients with complications was 28.1% [27.0 to
29.3] in very low volume hospitals and 22.7% [21.6 to 23.8] in very
high volume hospitals. Differences were similar within the subgroup
of patients operated for gastric cancer.
Conclusions Treatment in
very high volume hospitals is associated with a lower in-hospital
mortality compared to treatment in very low volume hospitals. This
effect seems to be determined by the ability to rescue patients who
experience complications. As the observed benefit is only related to
very high volumes, the results do not clearly indicate that
centralization may improve short-term results substantially, unless a
very high degree of centralization would be achieved. Possibly,
further research focusing on other outcome measures, such as clinical
processes or long-term results, might lead to divergent
conclusions.
018-1742-6
018-1742-6
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