학술논문

Benchmarking of surgical complications in gynaecological oncology: prospective multicentre study.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology. Dec2016, Vol. 123 Issue 13, p2171-2180. 10p.
Subject
*GYNECOLOGIC pathology
*PREDICTION models
*PUBLIC health
*DEATH rate
ONCOLOGIC surgery complications
Language
ISSN
1470-0328
Abstract
Objective: To explore the impact of risk-adjustment on surgical complication rates (CRs) for benchmarking gynaecological oncology centres. Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: Ten UK accredited gynaecological oncology centres. Population: Women undergoing major surgery on a gynaecological oncology operating list. Methods: Patient co-morbidity, surgical procedures and intra-operative (IntraOp) complications were recorded contemporaneously by surgeons for 2948 major surgical procedures. Postoperative (PostOp) complications were collected from hospitals and patients. Risk-prediction models for IntraOp and PostOp complications were created using penalised (lasso) logistic regression using over 30 potential patient/surgical risk factors. Main Outcome Measures: Observed and risk-adjusted IntraOp and PostOp CRs for individual hospitals were calculated. Benchmarking using colour-coded funnel plots and observed-to-expected ratios was undertaken. Results: Overall, IntraOp CR was 4.7% (95% CI 4.0-5.6) and PostOp CR was 25.7% (95% CI 23.7-28.2). The observed CRs for all hospitals were under the upper 95% control limit for both IntraOp and PostOp funnel plots. Risk-adjustment and use of observed-to-expected ratio resulted in one hospital moving to the >95-98% CI (red) band for IntraOp CRs. Use of only hospital-reported data for PostOp CRs would have resulted in one hospital being unfairly allocated to the red band. There was little concordance between IntraOp and PostOp CRs. Conclusion: The funnel plots and overall IntraOp (≈5%) and PostOp (≈26%) CRs could be used for benchmarking gynaecological oncology centres. Hospital benchmarking using risk-adjusted CRs allows fairer institutional comparison. IntraOp and PostOp CRs are best assessed separately. As hospital under-reporting is common for postoperative complications, use of patient-reported outcomes is important. Tweetable Abstract: Risk-adjusted benchmarking of surgical complications for ten UK gynaecological oncology centres allows fairer comparison. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]