• J Trauma Acute Care Surg · May 2018

    Multicenter Study

    Hospital variation in mortality after emergent bowel resections: The role of failure-to-rescue.

    • Ambar Mehta, David T Efron, Kent Stevens, Mariuxi C Manukyan, Bellal Joseph, and Joseph V Sakran.
    • From the Johns Hopkins, School of Medicine (A.M.); Department of Surgery (D.E., K.S., M.C.M., J.V.S.), Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland; and Department of Surgery(B.J.), College of Medicine Tucson, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona.
    • J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2018 May 1; 84 (5): 702-710.

    BackgroundHospital variation in failure-to-rescue (FTR) rates has partially explained nationwide differences in mortality after elective surgeries. To examine the role of FTR among emergency general surgery, we compared nationwide risk-adjusted mortality, complications, and FTR rates after emergent bowel resections.MethodsWe identified patients who underwent emergent small or large bowel resections in the 2010 to 2011 Nationwide Inpatient Sample using the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma criteria. We then calculated risk-adjusted mortality rates for each hospital using multivariable logistic regressions and postestimation, which adjusted for patient age, sex, race and ethnicity, payer status, comorbidities, and hospital clustering. After excluding hospitals with fewer than 10 resections per year, we ranked the remaining hospitals by their risk-adjusted mortality rates and divided them into five quintiles. We compared both risk-adjusted complication rates and FTR rates between the top (lowest mortality) and bottom (highest mortality) quintiles.ResultsWe identified 21,564 emergent bowel resections, weighted to 105,925 procedures nationwide. The bottom quintile of hospitals had an overall risk-adjusted mortality rate that was 10.9 times higher than that of the top quintile of hospitals (15.3% vs. 1.4%). While risk-adjusted complication rates were similarly high for both the bottom and the top quintiles of hospitals (22.5% vs. 15.7%), the risk-adjusted FTR rates were 10.8 times higher in the bottom quintile of hospitals relative to the top quintile of hospitals (33.4% vs. 3.1%). Using larger hospital volume thresholds yielded similar findings. Furthermore, large variations existed in complication-specific FTR rates (surgical site infection [6.6%] to myocardial infarction [29.4%]).ConclusionNationwide hospital variation in risk-adjusted mortality rates exist after emergent bowel resections. As complication rates were similar across hospitals, the significantly higher FTR rates at higher-mortality hospitals may drive this variation in mortality. System-level initiatives addressing the management of postoperative complications may improve patient care and reduce variation in outcomes.Level Of EvidencePrognostic and epidemiological study, level IV.

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