Understanding Variation in In-hospital Mortality After Major Surgery in the United States

Author:

Martins Russell Seth1,Chang Yu-Hui2,Etzioni David3,Stucky Chee-Chee4,Cronin Patricia4,Wasif Nabil4

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Clinical Best Practices (CCBP), Clinical and Translational Research Incubator (CITRIC), Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan

2. Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Phoenix, AZ

3. Division of Colorectal Surgery, Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Phoenix, AZ

4. Division of Surgical Oncology and Endocrine Surgery, Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Phoenix, Arizona, USA

Abstract

Objectives: We aimed to quantify the contributions of patient characteristics (PC), hospital structural characteristics (HC), and hospital operative volumes (HOV) to in-hospital mortality (IHM) after major surgery in the United States (US). Background: The volume-outcome relationship correlates higher HOV with decreased IHM. However, IHM after major surgery is multifactorial, and the relative contribution of PC, HC, and HOV to IHM after major surgery is unknown. Study Design: Patients undergoing major pancreatic, esophageal, lung, bladder, and rectal operations between 2006 and 2011 were identified from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample linked to the American Hospital Association survey. Multilevel logistic regression models were constructed using PC, HC, and HOV to calculate attributable variability in IHM for each. Results: Eighty thousand nine hundred sixty-nine patients across 1025 hospitals were included. Postoperative IHM ranged from 0.9% for rectal to 3.9% for esophageal surgery. Patient characteristics contributed most of the variability in IHM for esophageal (63%), pancreatic (62.9%), rectal (41.2%), and lung (44.4%) operations. HOV explained < 25% of variability for pancreatic, esophageal, lung, and rectal surgery. HC accounted for 16.9% and 17.4% of the variability in IHM for esophageal and rectal surgery. Unexplained variability in IHM was high in the lung (44.3%), bladder (39.3%), and rectal (33.7%) surgery subgroups. Conclusions: Despite recent policy focus on the volume-outcome relationship, HOV was not the most important contributor to IHM for the major organ surgeries studied. PC remains the largest identifiable contributor to hospital mortality. Quality improvement initiatives should emphasize patient optimization and structural improvements, in addition to investigating the yet unexplained sources contributing to IHM.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Surgery

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