• J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. · Sep 2024

    Increasing Surgeon Experience and Cumulative Institutional Experience Drive Decreasing Hospital Mortality after Reoperative Cardiac Surgery.

    • Eugene H Blackstone, Gösta B Pettersson, Amol Pande, Marc Gillinov, Faisal G Bakaeen, Kenneth R McCurry, Eric E Roselli, Nicholas G Smedira, Edward G Soltesz, Michael Tong, Shinya Unai, Jeevanantham Rajeswaran, Jules Joel Bakhos, and Lars G Svensson.
    • Department of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Heart, Vascular & Thoracic Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio; Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio. Electronic address: blackse@ccf.org.
    • J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg. 2024 Sep 1; 168 (3): 907918.e6907-918.e6.

    ObjectiveThe study objective was to identify the effects of surgeon experience and age, in the context of cumulative institutional experience, on risk-adjusted hospital mortality after cardiac reoperations.MethodsFrom 1951 to 2020, 36 surgeons performed 160,338 cardiac operations, including 32,871 reoperations. Hospital death was modeled using a novel tree-bagged, generalized varying-coefficient method with 6 variables reflecting cumulative surgeon and institutional experience up to each cardiac operation: (1) number of total and (2) reoperative cardiac operations performed by a surgeon, (3) cumulative institutional number of total and (4) reoperative cardiac operations, (5) year of surgery, and (6) surgeon age at each operation. These were adjusted for 46 patient characteristics and surgical components.ResultsThere were 1470 hospital deaths after cardiac reoperations (4.5%). At the institutional level, hospital death decreased exponentially and became less variable, leveling at 1.2% after approximately 14,000 cardiac reoperations. For all surgeons as a group, hospital death decreased rapidly over the first 750 reoperations and then gradually decreased with increasing experience to less than 1% after approximately 4000 reoperations. Surgeon age up to 75 years was associated with ever-decreasing hospital death.ConclusionsSurgeon age and experience have been implicated in adverse surgical outcomes, particularly after complex cardiac operations, with young surgeons being novices and older surgeons having declining ability. However, at Cleveland Clinic, outcomes of cardiac reoperations improved with increasing primary surgeon experience, without any suggestion to mid-70s of an age cutoff. Patients were protected by the cumulative background of institutional experience that created a culture of safety and teamwork that mitigated adverse events after cardiac surgery.Copyright © 2023 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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