Association Between Surgeon Technical Skills and Patient Outcomes

Jonah J Stulberg, Reiping Huang, Lindsey Kreutzer, Kristen Ban, Bradley J Champagne, Scott R Steele, Julie K Johnson, Jane L Holl, Caprice C Greenberg, Karl Y Bilimoria, Jonah J Stulberg, Reiping Huang, Lindsey Kreutzer, Kristen Ban, Bradley J Champagne, Scott R Steele, Julie K Johnson, Jane L Holl, Caprice C Greenberg, Karl Y Bilimoria

Abstract

Importance: Postoperative complications remain common after surgery, but little is known about the extent of variation in operative technical skill and whether variation is associated with patient outcomes.

Objectives: To examine the (1) variation in technical skill scores of practicing surgeons, (2) association between technical skills and patient outcomes, and (3) amount of variation in patient outcomes explained by a surgeon's technical skill.

Design, setting, and participants: In this quality improvement study, 17 practicing surgeons submitted a video of a laparoscopic right hemicolectomy that was then rated by at least 10 blinded peer surgeons and 2 expert raters. The association between surgeon technical skill scores and risk-adjusted outcomes was examined using data from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program. The association between technical skill scores and outcomes was examined for colorectal procedures and noncolorectal procedures (ie, assessed on whether technical skills demonstrated during colectomy were associated with patient outcomes across other cases). In addition, the proportion of patient outcomes explained by technical skill scores was examined using robust regression techniques. The study was conducted from September 23, 2016, to February 10, 2018; data analysis was performed from November 2018 to January 2019.

Exposures: Colorectal and noncolorectal procedures.

Main outcomes and measures: Any complication, mortality, unplanned hospital readmission, unplanned reoperation related to principal procedure, surgical site infection, and death or serious morbidity.

Results: Of the 17 surgeons included in the study, 13 were men (76%). The participants had a range from 1 to 28 years in surgical practice (median, 11 years). Based on 10 or more reviewers per video and with a maximum quality score of 5, overall technical skill scores ranged from 2.8 to 4.6. From 2014 to 2016, study participants performed a total of 3063 procedures (1120 colectomies). Higher technical skill scores were significantly associated with lower rates of any complication (15.5% vs 20.6%, P = .03; Spearman rank-order correlation coefficient r = -0.54, P = .03), unplanned reoperation (4.7% vs 7.2%, P = .02; r = -0.60, P = .01), and a composite measure of death or serious morbidity (15.9% vs 21.4%, P = .02; r = -0.60, P = .01) following colectomy. Similar associations were found between colectomy technical skill scores and patient outcomes for all types of procedures performed by a surgeon. Overall, technical skill scores appeared to account for 25.8% of the variation in postcolectomy complication rates and 27.5% of the variation when including noncolectomy complication rates.

Conclusions and relevance: The findings of this study suggest that there is wide variation in technical skill among practicing surgeons, accounting for more than 25% of the variation in patient outcomes. Higher colectomy technical skill scores appear to be associated with lower complication rates for colectomy and for all other procedures performed by a surgeon. Efforts to improve surgeon technical skills may result in better patient outcomes.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Stulberg reported paid consultant services for Intuitive Surgical and receiving an Intuitive Foundation grant for unrelated work. Dr Greenberg reported receiving nonfinancial support from Johnson & Johnson outside the submitted work and is president and founder of the Academy for Surgical Coaching. No other disclosures were reported.

Figures

Figure.. Association Between Surgeon Technical Skill Score…
Figure.. Association Between Surgeon Technical Skill Score and Risk-Adjusted Postoperative Colectomy Outcomes
Risk-adjusted outcome rate by technical skill score with robust regression fitted line.

References

    1. Archampong D, Borowski D, Wille-Jørgensen P, Iversen LH. Workload and surgeon’s specialty for outcome after colorectal cancer surgery. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012;(3):CD005391. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD005391.pub3
    1. Hall BL, Huffman KM, Hamilton BH, et al. . Profiling individual surgeon performance using information from a high-quality clinical registry: opportunities and limitations. J Am Coll Surg. 2015;221(5):901-913. doi:10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2015.07.454
    1. Quinn CM, Bilimoria KY, Chung JW, Ko CY, Cohen ME, Stulberg JJ. Creating individual surgeon performance assessments in a statewide hospital surgical quality improvement collaborative. J Am Coll Surg. 2018;227(3):303-312.e3. doi:10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.06.002
    1. Keller DS, Delaney CP, Hashemi L, Haas EM. A national evaluation of clinical and economic outcomes in open versus laparoscopic colorectal surgery. Surg Endosc. 2016;30(10):4220-4228. doi:10.1007/s00464-015-4732-6
    1. Birkmeyer JD, Finks JF, O’Reilly A, et al. ; Michigan Bariatric Surgery Collaborative . Surgical skill and complication rates after bariatric surgery. N Engl J Med. 2013;369(15):1434-1442. doi:10.1056/NEJMsa1300625
    1. de Montbrun SL, Roberts PL, Lowry AC, et al. . A novel approach to assessing technical competence of colorectal surgery residents: the development and evaluation of the Colorectal Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skill (COSATS). Ann Surg. 2013;258(6):1001-1006. doi:10.1097/SLA.0b013e31829b32b8
    1. Martin JA, Regehr G, Reznick R, et al. . Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skill (OSATS) for surgical residents. Br J Surg. 1997;84(2):273-278. doi:10.1002/bjs.1800840237
    1. de Montbrun S, Roberts PL, Satterthwaite L, MacRae H. Implementing and evaluating a national certification technical skills examination: the Colorectal Objective Structured Assessment of Technical Skill. Ann Surg. 2016;264(1):1-6. doi:10.1097/SLA.0000000000001620
    1. Champagne BJ, Steele SR, Hendren SK, et al. . The American Society of Colon and Rectal Surgeons Assessment tool for performance of laparoscopic colectomy. Dis Colon Rectum. 2017;60(7):738-744. doi:10.1097/DCR.0000000000000817
    1. Merkow RP, Ju MH, Chung JW, et al. . Underlying reasons associated with hospital readmission following surgery in the United States. JAMA. 2015;313(5):483-495. doi:10.1001/jama.2014.18614
    1. Huffman KM, Cohen ME, Ko CY, Hall BL. A comprehensive evaluation of statistical reliability in ACS NSQIP profiling models. Ann Surg. 2015;261(6):1108-1113. doi:10.1097/SLA.0000000000000913
    1. Merkow RP, Hall BL, Cohen ME, et al. . Validity and feasibility of the American College of Surgeons colectomy composite outcome quality measure. Ann Surg. 2013;257(3):483-489. doi:10.1097/SLA.0b013e318273bf17
    1. Cohen ME, Ko CY, Bilimoria KY, et al. . Optimizing ACS NSQIP modeling for evaluation of surgical quality and risk: patient risk adjustment, procedure mix adjustment, shrinkage adjustment, and surgical focus. J Am Coll Surg. 2013;217(2):336-346.e1. doi:10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2013.02.027
    1. Varban OA, Greenberg CC, Schram J, et al. ; Michigan Bariatric Surgery Collaborative . Surgical skill in bariatric surgery: does skill in one procedure predict outcomes for another? Surgery. 2016;160(5):1172-1181. doi:10.1016/j.surg.2016.04.033
    1. Fecso AB, Szasz P, Kerezov G, Grantcharov TP. The effect of technical performance on patient outcomes in surgery: a systematic review. Ann Surg. 2017;265(3):492-501. doi:10.1097/SLA.0000000000001959
    1. Holst D, Kowalewski TM, White LW, et al. . Crowd-sourced assessment of technical skills: differentiating animate surgical skill through the wisdom of crowds. J Endourol. 2015;29(10):1183-1188. doi:10.1089/end.2015.0104

Source: PubMed

3
Předplatit