High Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Patient Volume Associated With Lower Mortality and Better Outcomes

Author:

Pandey Aditya S.1,Gemmete Joseph J.2,Wilson Thomas J.1,Chaudhary Neeraj2,Thompson B. Gregory1,Morgenstern Lewis B.13,Burke James F.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery

2. Department of Radiology

3. Department of Neurology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND: High-volume centers have better outcomes than low-volume centers when managing complex conditions including subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). OBJECTIVE: To quantify SAH volume-outcome association and determine the extent to which this association is influenced by aggressiveness of care. METHODS: A serial cross-sectional retrospective study using the Nationwide Inpatient Sample for 2002 to 2010 was performed. Included were all adult (older than 18 years of age) discharged patients with a primary diagnosis of SAH admitted from the emergency department or transferred to a discharging hospital; cases of trauma or arteriovenous malformation were excluded. Survey-weighted descriptive statistics estimated temporal trends. Multilevel logistic regression estimated volume-outcome associations for inpatient mortality and discharge home. Models were adjusted for demographic characteristics, year, transfer status, insurance status, all individual Charlson comorbidities, intubation, and all patient-refined, diagnosis-related group mortality. Analyses were repeated, excluding cases in which aggressive care was not pursued. RESULTS: A total of 32 336 discharges were included; 13 398 patients underwent clipping (59.1%) or coiling (40.9%). The inpatient mortality rate decreased from 32.2% in 2002 to 22.2% in 2010; discharge home increased from 28.5% to 40.8% during the same period. As SAH volume decreased from 100/year, the mortality rate increased from 18.7% to 19.8% at 80/year, 21.7% at 60/year, 24.5% at 40/year, and 28.4% at 20/year. As SAH patient volume decreased, the probability of discharge home decreased from 40.3% at 100/year to 38.7% at 60/year, and 35.3% at 20/year. Better outcomes persisted in patients receiving aggressive care and in those not receiving aggressive care. CONCLUSION: Short-term SAH outcomes have improved. High-volume hospitals have more favorable outcomes than low-volume hospitals. This effect is substantial, even for hospitals conventionally classified as high volume.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Surgery

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