Brandon Peine, Hanna Long, J Preston Bethea, Yuanyuan Fu, Rob Allman, Olasunkanmi Kehinde, Dmitry Tumin, Linda Kindell, William Irish, Shahab A Akhter
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Mounting financial pressures on academic institutions highlight the need to understand the effect on outcomes from trainee involvement in cardiac surgery. The purpose of this study is to examine the association between cardiothoracic fellows and clinical and financial outcomes in coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).
Methods: Data for all patients from 2017 to 2022 at a single institution who underwent nonemergent, isolated, open CABG were included in the study, with patients grouped by whether there was fellow operative participation. Financial and clinical outcomes were compared between the two groups using multivariable regression and generalized estimating equations to control for variation in patient characteristics and attending cardiac surgeon practices.
Results: A total of 1997 patients met criteria for study inclusion, with 632 (31.5%) cases that had fellow participation and 1365 (68.4%) that did not. Patients in the fellow participation group had a 0.8% higher median preoperative risk score than those that did not have fellow participation. Fellow participation was associated with significantly longer total case length (61 mins) but no differences in postoperative clinical outcomes. There was an increased median total hospitalization cost of approximately $2200 in cases with fellow participation, likely attributable to increased intraoperative costs from longer case times.
Conclusions: While CT surgery fellow participation was associated with longer operative times and a small increase in hospitalization cost in CABG, there were no significant differences in clinical outcomes. Continuing to train cardiothoracic surgery fellows in this procedure is safe and would not be expected to significantly impact reimbursement under bundled payment models.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Surgical Research: Clinical and Laboratory Investigation publishes original articles concerned with clinical and laboratory investigations relevant to surgical practice and teaching. The journal emphasizes reports of clinical investigations or fundamental research bearing directly on surgical management that will be of general interest to a broad range of surgeons and surgical researchers. The articles presented need not have been the products of surgeons or of surgical laboratories.
The Journal of Surgical Research also features review articles and special articles relating to educational, research, or social issues of interest to the academic surgical community.