Mapping the Diffusion of Technology in Orthopaedic Surgery: Understanding the Spread of Arthroscopic Rotator Cuff Repair in the United States.

D. Austin, M. Torchia, J. Lurie, D. Jevsevar, John‐Erik Bell
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

BACKGROUND The mechanism by which surgical innovation is spread in orthopaedic surgery is not well studied. The recent widespread transition from open to arthroscopic rotator cuff repair techniques provides us with the opportunity to study the spread of new technology; doing so would be important because it is unclear how novel orthopaedic techniques disseminate across time and geography, and previous studies of innovation in healthcare may not apply to the orthopaedic community. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES (1) How much regional variation was associated with the adoption of arthroscopic rotator cuff repair in the United States Medicare population between 2006 and 2014 and how did this change over time? (2) In which regions of the United States was arthroscopic rotator cuff repair first adopted and how did it spread geographically? (3) Which regional factors were associated with the adoption of this new technology? METHODS We divided the United States into 306 hospital referral regions based upon referral patterns observed in the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services MedPAR database, which records all Medicare hospital admissions; this has been done in numerous previous studies using methodology introduced by the Dartmouth Atlas. The proportion of arthroscopic rotator cuff repairs versus open rotator cuff repairs in each hospital referral region was calculated using adjusted procedural rates from the Medicare Part B Carrier File from 2006 to 2014, as it provided a nationwide sample of patients, and was used as a measure of adoption. A population-weighted, multivariable linear regression analysis was used to identify regional characteristics independently associated with adoption. RESULTS There was substantial regional variation associated with the adoption of arthroscopy for rotator cuff repair as the percentage of rotator cuff repair completed arthroscopically in 2006 ranged widely among hospital referral regions with a high of 85.3% in Provo, UT, USA, and a low of 16.7% in Seattle, WA, USA (OR 30, 95% CI 17.6 to 52.2; p < 0.001). In 2006, regions in the top quartiles for Medicare spending (+9.1%; p = 0.008) independently had higher adoption rates than those in the bottom quartile, as did regions with a greater proportion of college-educated residents (+12.0%; p = 0.009). The Northwest region (-14.4%; p = 0.009) and the presence of an academic medical center (-5.8%; p = 0.026) independently had lower adoption than other regions and those without academic medical centers. In 2014, regions in the top quartiles for Medicare spending (+5.7%; p = 0.033) and regions with a greater proportion of college-educated residents (+9.4%; p = 0.005) independently had higher adoption rates than those in the bottom quartiles, while the Northwest (-9.6%; p = 0.009) and Midwest regions (-5.1%; p = 0.017) independently had lower adoption than other regions. CONCLUSION The heterogeneous diffusion of arthroscopic rotator cuff repair across the United States highlights that Medicare beneficiaries across regions did not have equal access to these procedures and that these discrepancies continued to persist over time. A higher level of education and increased healthcare spending were both associated with greater adoption in a region and conversely suggest that regions with lower education and healthcare spending may pursue innovation more slowly. There was evidence that regions with academic medical centers adopted this technology more slowly and may highlight the role that private industry and physicians in nonacademic organizations play in surgical innovation. Future studies are needed to understand if this later adoption leads to inequalities in the quality and value of surgical care delivered to patients in these regions. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Level III, therapeutic study.
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测绘骨科手术技术的扩散:了解关节镜下肩袖修复在美国的传播。
手术创新在骨科手术中传播的机制尚未得到很好的研究。最近从开放到关节镜下的肩袖修复技术的广泛过渡为我们提供了研究新技术传播的机会;这样做是很重要的,因为目前尚不清楚新的骨科技术是如何跨时间和地域传播的,而且以前关于医疗保健创新的研究可能不适用于骨科社区。(1)2006年至2014年期间,美国医疗保险人群中采用关节镜旋转袖修复的地区差异有多大,这种差异如何随时间变化?(2)美国哪些地区首先采用关节镜下肩袖修复术,它在地理上是如何传播的?(3)哪些区域因素与这项新技术的采用有关?方法:根据医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心MedPAR数据库中观察到的转诊模式,我们将美国分为306个医院转诊地区,该数据库记录了所有医疗保险医院的入院情况;这已经在之前的许多研究中使用了达特茅斯地图集介绍的方法。每个医院转诊地区的关节镜肩袖修复与开放式肩袖修复的比例是根据2006年至2014年医疗保险B部分载体文件中的调整手术率计算的,因为它提供了全国范围内的患者样本,并被用作采用的衡量标准。采用人口加权、多变量线性回归分析来确定与收养独立相关的区域特征。结果采用关节镜进行肩袖修复存在明显的地区差异,2006年通过关节镜完成肩袖修复的比例在医院转诊地区差异很大,美国犹他州普罗沃的比例最高为85.3%,美国华盛顿州西雅图的比例最低为16.7% (OR 30, 95% CI 17.6 ~ 52.2;P < 0.001)。2006年,医疗保险支出最高的四分之一地区(+9.1%;P = 0.008)独立的采用率高于最低四分之一的地区,受过大学教育的居民比例更高的地区也是如此(+12.0%;P = 0.009)。西北地区-14.4%;P = 0.009)和学术医疗中心的存在(-5.8%;P = 0.026)的独立采用率低于其他地区和没有学术医疗中心的地区。2014年,医疗保险支出最高的四分之一地区(+5.7%;P = 0.033)和大学学历居民比例较高的地区(+9.4%;p = 0.005)独立的采用率高于底部四分之一,而西北地区(-9.6%;p = 0.009)和中西部地区(-5.1%;P = 0.017),独立采用率低于其他地区。结论:关节镜下肩袖修复术在美国的异质性扩散突出表明,不同地区的医疗保险受益人并没有平等地获得这些手术,并且这些差异随着时间的推移持续存在。较高的教育水平和增加的医疗保健支出都与一个地区更大的采用相关,反过来表明教育和医疗保健支出较低的地区可能追求创新的速度较慢。有证据表明,拥有学术医疗中心的地区采用这项技术的速度较慢,这可能突出了私营企业和非学术组织的医生在外科创新中所起的作用。需要进一步的研究来了解这种后来的采用是否会导致这些地区的患者在手术护理的质量和价值上的不平等。证据等级:III级,治疗性研究。
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