The Effect of Surgeon Volume on Complications Following Total Shoulder Arthroplasty: A Nationwide Assessment.

IF 2.9 2区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery Pub Date : 2024-09-05 DOI:10.1016/j.jse.2024.07.025
William Harkin, Rodrigo Saad Berreta, Tyler Williams, Amr Turkmani, John P Scanaliato, Johnathon R McCormick, Christopher S Klifto, Gregory P Nicholson, Grant E Garrigues
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Abstract

Background: Increased surgeon volume has been demonstrated to correlate with improved outcomes after orthopedic surgery. However, there is a lack of data demonstrating the effect of surgeon volume on outcomes after total shoulder arthroplasty.

Methods: The PearlDiver Mariner database was retrospectively queried from the years 2010-2022. Patients undergoing shoulder arthroplasty were selected using the CPT code 23472 (Total Shoulder Arthroplasty). Patients under 40 years of age, those undergoing revision arthroplasty and cases of bilateral arthroplasty were excluded. Additionally, cases with a history of fracture, infection, or malignancy prior to surgery were excluded. Only surgeons who performed a minimum of 10 cases were selected and PearlDiver was queried using their provider ID codes. Primary outcome measures included 90 day, 1-year, and 2-year rates of complication and reoperation. A Bonferroni correction was utilized in which the significance threshold was set at p≤0.00082 RESULTS: A total of 155,560 patients met inclusion criteria and were retained for analysis. The 90th percentile for surgeon volume was determined to be 112 cases during the study period. Surgeons above the 90th percentile (n=340) operated on 68,531 patients whereas surgeons below the 90th percentile (n=3,038) operated on 87,029 patients. Surgeons in the high-volume group were significantly more likely to have completed a Shoulder and Elbow fellowship (p<0.001) and less likely to have no fellowship training or fellowship training outside of Shoulder and Elbow or Sports Medicine (p<0.001). Low-volume surgeons operated on patients with higher baseline comorbidities (CCI: 2.01 vs 1.85, p<0.001). After adjusting for age, gender, CCI, obesity, and tobacco use, high-volume surgeons experienced lower rates of medical complications including renal failure (p<0.001), anemia (p<0.001), and UTI (p<0.001). All cause readmission (0.90, p<0.001), reoperation at 90 days (OR 0.75, p<0.001) and reoperation at 1 year (OR: 0.86, p<0.001) were significantly lower among high-volume surgeons. High-volume surgeons exhibited lower rates of various complications including prosthetic joint infection (90d: p<0.001; 1yr: p<0.001; 2yr: p<0.001), periprosthetic fracture (90d: p<0.001; 1yr: p<0.001; 2yr: p<0.001) and all complications (90d: p<0.001; 1yr: p<0.001).

Conclusion: Surgeons who perform a high volume of total shoulder arthroplasty are more likely to operate on healthier patients than surgeons who perform a lower volume of cases. When compared to low-volume surgeons, and after adjusting for age, gender, and CCI, high-volume surgeons have a significantly lower overall complication rate. Despite this lower complication rate, high-volume surgeons are responsible for a decreasing portion of shoulder arthroplasty since 2016.

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外科医生数量对全肩关节置换术后并发症的影响:全国性评估
背景:外科医生数量的增加已被证明与骨科手术后疗效的改善相关。然而,目前尚缺乏数据显示外科医生数量对全肩关节置换术后疗效的影响:方法:对 2010-2022 年间的 PearlDiver Mariner 数据库进行了回顾性查询。采用 CPT 编码 23472(全肩关节置换术)筛选出接受肩关节置换术的患者。年龄小于 40 岁的患者、接受翻修关节置换术的患者和双侧关节置换术病例均被排除在外。此外,手术前有骨折、感染或恶性肿瘤病史的病例也被排除在外。只选取了至少完成 10 例手术的外科医生,并使用其提供者 ID 代码查询 PearlDiver。主要结果指标包括 90 天、1 年和 2 年的并发症发生率和再手术率。采用 Bonferroni 校正,显著性阈值设定为 p≤0.00082 结果:共有 155,560 名患者符合纳入标准,并保留用于分析。研究期间,外科医生手术量的第 90 百分位数为 112 例。高于第90百分位数的外科医生(人数=340)为68531名患者实施了手术,而低于第90百分位数的外科医生(人数=3038)则为87029名患者实施了手术。高手术量组的外科医生更有可能完成了肩肘研究员培训(p结论:高手术量组的外科医生更有可能完成了肩肘研究员培训:与手术量较少的外科医生相比,手术量大的外科医生更有可能为更健康的患者进行全肩关节置换手术。与手术量少的外科医生相比,在对年龄、性别和CCI进行调整后,手术量大的外科医生的总体并发症发生率明显较低。尽管并发症发生率较低,但自2016年以来,高手术量外科医生负责的肩关节置换术比例却在下降。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
23.30%
发文量
604
审稿时长
11.2 weeks
期刊介绍: The official publication for eight leading specialty organizations, this authoritative journal is the only publication to focus exclusively on medical, surgical, and physical techniques for treating injury/disease of the upper extremity, including the shoulder girdle, arm, and elbow. Clinically oriented and peer-reviewed, the Journal provides an international forum for the exchange of information on new techniques, instruments, and materials. Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery features vivid photos, professional illustrations, and explicit diagrams that demonstrate surgical approaches and depict implant devices. Topics covered include fractures, dislocations, diseases and injuries of the rotator cuff, imaging techniques, arthritis, arthroscopy, arthroplasty, and rehabilitation.
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