Cost-Effectiveness in Hepatic Lobectomy: the Effect of Case Volume on Mortality, Readmission, and Cost of Care

Objective(s) Higher-volume centers demonstrate better perioperative outcomes for complex surgical interventions, though resource utilization implications of this hospital-level variation are unclear. We hypothesized that for hepatic lobectomy, higher operative volume correlates with better outcomes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of gastrointestinal surgery 2016-02, Vol.20 (2), p.253-261
Hauptverfasser: Sutton, Jeffrey M., Hoehn, Richard S., Ertel, Audrey E., Wilson, Gregory C., Hanseman, Dennis J., Wima, Koffi, Sussman, Jeffrey J., Ahmad, Syed A., Shah, Shimul A., Abbott, Daniel E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective(s) Higher-volume centers demonstrate better perioperative outcomes for complex surgical interventions, though resource utilization implications of this hospital-level variation are unclear. We hypothesized that for hepatic lobectomy, higher operative volume correlates with better outcomes and lower costs. Methods From 2009 to 2011, 4163 patients undergoing hepatic lobectomy were identified from the University HealthSystems Consortium database. Univariate, multivariate logistic regression, and decision analytic models were constructed to identify differences in hospital utilization and cost. Cost included both index and readmission hospitalizations, when applicable. Results The annual number of hepatic lobectomies performed by the institutions within the study ranged from 1 to 86. The median age of the 4163 patients was 58 years with a roughly equal gender split (M/F 49 %:51 %) and a racial breakdown which reflected that of the general US population. For all patients, the overall perioperative mortality rate was 2.3 % and the 30-day readmission rate was 13.4 %. Hospitals performing >30 hepatic lobectomies per year had significantly lower mortality and readmission rates than those hospitals performing ≤15 lobectomies annually (both p  
ISSN:1091-255X
1873-4626
DOI:10.1007/s11605-015-2964-3