Original article
General thoracic
Association Between Surgeon and Hospital Volume and In-Hospital Fatalities After Lung Cancer Resections: The Experience of an Asian Country

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.athoracsur.2006.12.008Get rights and content

Background

We used 4-year nationwide population-based data to explore the volume-outcome relationships for lung cancer resections in Taiwan and to determine whether there is any association between high-volume hospitals or high-volume surgeons and lower in-hospital mortality rates.

Methods

We use pooled data for the years 2001 through 2004 obtained from the National Health Insurance Research Database in Taiwan. A total of 4,841 patients, identified as having undergone pulmonary resections for lung or bronchial tumors during the period of this study, were treated by 377 surgeons in 79 hospitals. Multivariate logistic regression analyses were then employed to assess the crude and adjusted odds ratio of in-patient fatalities between surgeon and hospital lung cancer resection volume groups.

Results

Patients treated by low-volume surgeons had significantly higher in-hospital fatality rates than those treated by either medium-volume surgeons (2.3% versus 1.0%; p < 0.001) or high-volume surgeons (2.3% versus 0.6%; p < 0.001). However, hospital case volume alone is not a significant predictor of hospital in-patient fatalities for lung cancer resections. With increasing surgeon volume, there was a decline in the adjusted odds ratio of hospital in-patient deaths. The odds of hospital in-patient deaths for those patients treated by low-volume surgeons were 2.04 times those of medium-volume surgeons, and 2.63 times those of high-volume surgeons.

Conclusions

We conclude that after adjusting for patient, surgeon, and hospital characteristics, an inverse volume-outcome relationship does exist for surgeons, but not for hospitals, in Taiwan.

Section snippets

Database

This study uses pooled data for the years 2001 to 2004, obtained from the National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD) published in Taiwan by the National Health Research Institute. The NHIRD database covers all in-patient medical benefit claims for the Taiwanese population of more than 20 million. It also provides principal operational procedures for each patient, along with one principal diagnosis code and as many as four secondary diagnosis codes obtained from the International

Results

Of the 4,841 patients in Taiwan on whom pulmonary resections had been performed for lung or bronchial tumors between January 2001 and December 2004, 471 (9.7%) had undergone segmental resections, 1,476 (30.5%) had wedge resections, 2,642 (54.6%) had undergone lobectomies, and 252 (5.2%) had pneumonectomies. The mean age of the patients was 64.2 years, and the mean age of the attending surgeons was 45.4 years.

Details of the distribution of surgeons and patients for lung cancer resections, by

Comment

This paper represents quite an uncommon example of an investigation into the volume-outcome relationship in lung cancer resections outside of the United States, with the opportunity to undertake this study having arisen from the availability of a comprehensive nationwide population-based dataset. Our results demonstrate that after adjusting for surgeon, hospital, and patient characteristics, a significant inverse relationship exists between surgeon volume and the odds of in-hospital deaths;

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