Reducing Unnecessary Type and Screens Prior to Thoracic Surgery: A Quality Improvement Initiative

Previous work identified that routine preoperative type and screen (T&S) testing before elective thoracic surgery is overutilized. We hypothesized that instituting a quality improvement (QI) initiative to change practice would significantly reduce this unnecessary testing, reduce costs, and impr...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of surgical research 2023-03, Vol.283, p.743-750
Hauptverfasser: Finley, David J., Fay, Kayla A., Porter, Eleah D., Hasson, Rian M., Millington, Timothy M., Phillips, Joseph D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Previous work identified that routine preoperative type and screen (T&S) testing before elective thoracic surgery is overutilized. We hypothesized that instituting a quality improvement (QI) initiative to change practice would significantly reduce this unnecessary testing, reduce costs, and improve healthcare efficiency. A QI initiative was developed at a single, academic center to reduce empiric T&S ordering before elective anatomic lung resections. Two interventions were implemented: 1) education based on current institutional data and 2) an electronic medical record order set modification. Utilization of T&S testing, blood transfusion data, and perioperative outcomes were tracked and compared between a preintervention group (2015-2018) and a postintervention group (2020-2021). Cost data were derived from institutional charges and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services fee schedules. Of the 553 patients included: 420 were in the preintervention group and 133 were in the postintervention group. The rate of routine T&Ss significantly dropped after implementing the QI initiative (97 versus 20%, P ≤ 0.001). Additionally, no difference in blood transfusion rate was observed (4.3 versus 2.3%, P = 0.29), and there were no differences noted in postoperative complications (P = 0.82), 30-day readmission (P = 0.29), or mortality (P = 0.96). Based on current volumes of ∼200 anatomic lung resections/year, estimated cost savings from reducing T&S testing from 97 to 20% would be at least $40,000 a year. Our QI initiative significantly reduced the use of routine T&S testing. This practice change was achieved while maintaining excellent outcomes demonstrating routine preoperative T&S testing can be safely reduced in most elective thoracic surgery.
ISSN:0022-4804
1095-8673
DOI:10.1016/j.jss.2022.11.032