Variation in Hospital Performance for General Surgery in Younger and Older Adults: A Retrospective Cohort Study.

IF 7.5 1区 医学 Q1 SURGERY
Annals of surgery Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-12-21 DOI:10.1097/SLA.0000000000006184
Ezra S Brooks, Christopher J Wirtalla, Claire B Rosen, Caitlin B Finn, Rachel R Kelz
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Abstract

Objective: To compare hospital surgical performance in older and younger patients.

Background: In-hospital mortality after surgical procedures varies widely among hospitals. Prior studies suggest that failure-to-rescue rates drive this variation for older adults, but the generalizability of these findings to younger patients remains unknown.

Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study of patients ≥18 years undergoing one of 10 common and complex general surgery operations in 16 states using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Projects State Inpatient Databases (2016-2018). Patients were split into 2 populations: patients with Medicare ≥65 (older adult) and non-Medicare <65 (younger adult). Hospitals were sorted into quintiles using risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality rates for each age population. Correlations between hospitals in each mortality quintile across age populations were calculated. Complication and failure-to-rescue rates were compared across the highest and lowest mortality quintiles in each age population.

Results: We identified 579,582 patients treated in 732 hospitals. The mortality rate was 3.6% among older adults and 0.7% among younger adults. Among older adults, high- relative to low-mortality hospitals had similar complication rates (32.0% vs 29.8%; P = 0.059) and significantly higher failure-to-rescue rates (16.0% vs 4.0%; P < 0.001). Among younger adults, high-relative to low-mortality hospitals had higher complications (15.4% vs 12.1%; P < 0.001) and failure-to-rescue rates (8.3% vs 0.7%; P < 0.001). The correlation between observed-to-expected mortality ratios in each age group was 0.385 ( P < 0.001).

Conclusions: High surgical mortality rates in younger patients may be driven by both complication and failure-to-rescue rates. There is little overlap between low-mortality hospitals in the older and younger adult populations. Future work must delve into the root causes of this age-based difference in hospital-level surgical outcomes.

年轻人和老年人在普通外科方面的医院表现差异:回顾性队列研究
摘要比较老年患者和年轻患者在医院手术中的表现:不同医院外科手术后的院内死亡率差异很大。先前的研究表明,抢救失败率是导致老年人出现这种差异的原因,但这些研究结果能否推广到年轻患者身上仍是未知数:我们利用 "医疗成本与利用项目州住院患者数据库(2016-2018 年)",对 16 个州接受 10 种常见和复杂普外科手术之一的≥18 岁患者进行了一项回顾性队列研究。患者分为两类:医疗保险≥65岁(老年人)和非医疗保险结果:我们确定了在 732 家医院接受治疗的 579,582 名患者。老年人的死亡率为 3.6%,年轻人的死亡率为 0.7%。在老年人中,死亡率高的医院与死亡率低的医院的并发症发生率相似(32.0% 对 29.8%;P=0.059),抢救失败率明显更高(16.0% 对 4.0%;P=0.059):年轻患者的手术死亡率高可能是并发症和抢救失败率造成的。老年人群和年轻人群中死亡率低的医院几乎没有重叠。未来的工作必须深入研究造成医院手术结果年龄差异的根本原因。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Annals of surgery
Annals of surgery 医学-外科
CiteScore
14.40
自引率
4.40%
发文量
687
审稿时长
4 months
期刊介绍: The Annals of Surgery is a renowned surgery journal, recognized globally for its extensive scholarly references. It serves as a valuable resource for the international medical community by disseminating knowledge regarding important developments in surgical science and practice. Surgeons regularly turn to the Annals of Surgery to stay updated on innovative practices and techniques. The journal also offers special editorial features such as "Advances in Surgical Technique," offering timely coverage of ongoing clinical issues. Additionally, the journal publishes monthly review articles that address the latest concerns in surgical practice.
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