Association Between Hospital Volumes and Clinical Outcomes for Patients With Nontraumatic Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

Author:

Leifer Dana1ORCID,Fonarow Gregg C.2ORCID,Hellkamp Anne3ORCID,Baker David4,Hoh Brian L.5,Prabhakaran Shyam6ORCID,Schoeberl Mark7,Suter Robert8,Washington Chad9,Williams Scott2,Xian Ying4ORCID,Schwamm Lee H.10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology Weill Cornell Medical College New York NY

2. Department of Medicine University of California Los Angeles School of Medicine Los Angeles CA

3. Duke Clinical Research Institute Duke University Durham NC

4. The Joint Commission Oakbrook IL

5. Department of Neurosurgery University of Florida Gainesville FL

6. Department of Neurology Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Chicago IL

7. American Heart Association Dallas TX

8. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Texas Southwestern Dallas TX

9. Department of Neurosurgery University of Mississippi Jackson MS

10. Department of Neurology Harvard Medical School Boston MA

Abstract

Background Previous studies of patients with nontraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) suggest better outcomes at hospitals with higher case and procedural volumes, but the shape of the volume‐outcome curve has not been defined. We sought to establish minimum volume criteria for SAH and aneurysm obliteration procedures that could be used for comprehensive stroke center certification. Methods and Results Data from 8512 discharges in the National Inpatient Sample (NIS) from 2010 to 2011 were analyzed using logistic regression models to evaluate the association between clinical outcomes (in‐hospital mortality and the NIS‐SAH Outcome Measure [NIS‐SOM]) and measures of hospital annual case volume (nontraumatic SAH discharges, coiling, and clipping procedures). Sensitivity and specificity analyses for the association of desirable outcomes with different volume thresholds were performed. During 8512 SAH hospitalizations, 28.7% of cases underwent clipping and 20.1% underwent coiling with rates of 21.2% for in‐hospital mortality and 38.6% for poor outcome on the NIS‐SOM. The mean (range) of SAH, coiling, and clipping annual case volumes were 30.9 (1–195), 8.7 (0–94), and 6.1 (0–69), respectively. Logistic regression demonstrated improved outcomes with increasing annual case volumes of SAH discharges and procedures for aneurysm obliteration, with attenuation of the benefit beyond 35 SAH cases/year. Analysis of sensitivity and specificity using different volume thresholds confirmed these results. Analysis of previously proposed volume thresholds, including those utilized as minimum standards for comprehensive stroke center certification, showed that hospitals with more than 35 SAH cases annually had consistently superior outcomes compared with hospitals with fewer cases, although some hospitals below this threshold had similar outcomes. The adjusted odds ratio demonstrating lower risk of poor outcomes with SAH annual case volume ≥35 compared with 20 to 34 was 0.82 for the NIS‐SOM (95% CI, 0.71–094; P =0.0054) and 0.80 (95% CI, 0.68–0.93; P =0.0055) for in‐hospital mortality. Conclusions Outcomes for patients with SAH improve with increasing hospital case volumes and procedure volumes, with consistently better outcomes for hospitals with more than 35 SAH cases per year.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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