Weekday effect of surgery on in-hospital outcome in pancreatic surgery: a population-based study.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 SURGERY
Konstantin Uttinger, Annika Niezold, Lina Weimann, Patrick Sven Plum, Philip Baum, Johannes Diers, Maximilian Brunotte, Sebastian Rademacher, Christoph-Thomas Germer, Daniel Seehofer, Armin Wiegering
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Importance: There is conflicting evidence regarding weekday dependent outcome in complex abdominal surgery, including pancreatic resections.

Objective: To clarify weekday-dependency of outcome after pancreatic resections in a comprehensive nationwide context.

Design: Retrospective cross-sectional study of anonymized nationwide hospital billing data (DRG data).

Setting: Germany between 2010 and 2020. PARTICIPANTS AND EXPOSURE: all patient records with a procedural code for a pancreatic resection.

Main outcome and measures: Primary endpoint was complication occurrence and failure to rescue, i.e. mortality in case of complications, by weekday of index surgery.

Results: 94,661 patient records with a pancreatic resection were analyzed, of whom 45.2% were female. Mean age was 65.3 years. In 46.3% of all patient records, the main diagnosis was pancreatic carcinoma. The most common index surgery was pancreaticoduodenectomy (61.2%). Occurrence of at least one of predefined complications was 67.6% (64,029 cases) and was highest following a Monday index surgery. In-hospital mortality in case of at least one complication, i.e. failure to rescue (FtR), accounted for 8,040 deaths (97.7% of 8,228 total deaths, 12.6% FtR, 8.7% in-hospital mortality). FtR was highest (13.1%) following a Monday index surgery and lowest (11.8%) after a Thursday index surgery. Overall in-hospital mortality followed the same trend as FtR. In a multivariable logistic regression, in the overall cohort, in addition to increased age, frailty, male sex, benign entities, and total pancreatectomy performance, Wednesday (adjusted Odd's Ratio, OR, 0.92, 95% Confidence Interval, CI, 0.85-0.99) and Thursday (adjusted OR, 0.89, CI, 0.82-0.96) index surgeries were associated with lower FtR in reference to Monday. Stratified by patient volume, complication occurrence and FtR was only dependent of the weekday of index surgery in low volume hospitals.

Conclusions and relevance: Pancreatic resections are complex procedures with high complication rates and FtR, resulting in high in-hospital mortality. Complication occurrence and FtR is dependent on the weekday of index surgery and mediates the same distribution pattern for overall in-hospital mortality. Stratified by patient volume, this weekday dependency of the index surgery on complication occurrence and FtR was only observed in low volume hospitals.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
8.70%
发文量
342
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Langenbeck''s Archives of Surgery aims to publish the best results in the field of clinical surgery and basic surgical research. The main focus is on providing the highest level of clinical research and clinically relevant basic research. The journal, published exclusively in English, will provide an international discussion forum for the controlled results of clinical surgery. The majority of published contributions will be original articles reporting on clinical data from general and visceral surgery, while endocrine surgery will also be covered. Papers on basic surgical principles from the fields of traumatology, vascular and thoracic surgery are also welcome. Evidence-based medicine is an important criterion for the acceptance of papers.
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