Influence of Individual Surgeon Volume on Oncological Outcome of Colorectal Cancer Surgery

Author:

Buurma Marleen1,Kroon Hidde M.1,Reimers Marlies S.12,Neijenhuis Peter A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Alrijne Hospital, Location Leiderdorp, Simon Smitweg 1, 2353 GA Leiderdorp, Netherlands

2. Department of Surgery, Leiden University Medical Center, Albinusdreef 2, 2333 ZA Leiden, Netherlands

Abstract

Background. Surgery performed by a high-volume surgeon improves short-term outcomes. However, not much is known about long-term effects. Therefore we performed the current study to evaluate the impact of high-volume colorectal surgeons on survival.Methods. We conducted a retrospective analysis of our prospectively collected colorectal cancer database between 2004 and 2011. Patients were divided into two groups: operated on by a high-volume surgeon (>25 cases/year) or by a low-volume surgeon (<25 cases/year). Perioperative data were collected as well as follow-up, recurrence rates, and survival data.Results. 774 patients underwent resection for colorectal malignancies. Thirteen low-volume surgeons operated on 453 patients and 4 high-volume surgeons operated on 321 patients. Groups showed an equal distribution for preoperative characteristics, except a higher ASA-classification in the low-volume group. A high-volume surgeon proved to be an independent prognostic factor for disease-free survival in the multivariate analysisP=0.04. Although overall survival did show a significant difference in the univariate analysisP<0.001it failed to reach statistical significance in the multivariate analysisP=0.09.Conclusions. In our study, a higher number of colorectal cases performed per surgeon were associated with longer disease-free survival. Implementing high-volume surgery results in improved long-term outcome following colorectal cancer.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Oncology,Surgery

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