Is There a Minimum Number of Thyroidectomies a Surgeon Should Perform to Optimize Patient Outcomes?
- PMID: 28059969
- DOI: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000001688
Is There a Minimum Number of Thyroidectomies a Surgeon Should Perform to Optimize Patient Outcomes?
Abstract
Objective: To determine the number of total thyroidectomies per surgeon per year associated with the lowest risk of complications.
Background: The surgeon volume-outcome association has been established for thyroidectomy; however, a threshold number of cases defining a "high-volume" surgeon remains unclear.
Methods: Adults undergoing total thyroidectomy were identified from the Health Care Utilization Project-National Inpatient Sample (1998-2009). Multivariate logistic regression with restricted cubic splines was utilized to examine the association between the number of annual total thyroidectomies per surgeon and risk of complications.
Results: Among 16,954 patients undergoing total thyroidectomy, 47% had thyroid cancer and 53% benign disease. Median annual surgeon volume was 7 cases; 51% of surgeons performed 1 case/y. Overall, 6% of the patients experienced complications. After adjustment, the likelihood of experiencing a complication decreased with increasing surgeon volume up to 26 cases/y (P < 0.01). Among all patients, 81% had surgery by low-volume surgeons (≤25 cases/y). With adjustment, patients undergoing surgery by low-volume surgeons were more likely to experience complications (odds ratio 1.51, P = 0.002) and longer hospital stays (+12%, P = 0.006). Patients had an 87% increase in the odds of having a complication if the surgeon performed 1 case/y, 68% for 2 to 5 cases/y, 42% for 6 to 10 cases/y, 22% for 11 to 15 cases/y, 10% for 16 to 20 cases/y, and 3% for 21 to 25 cases/y.
Conclusions: This is the first study to identify a surgeon volume threshold (>25 total thyroidectomies/y) that is associated with improved patient outcomes. Identifying a threshold number of cases defining a high-volume thyroid surgeon is important, as it has implications for quality improvement, criteria for referral and reimbursement, and surgical education.
Comment in
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Hospital Administrative Data Should Not be Used to Study Thyroid Surgery Outcomes.Ann Surg. 2018 Apr;267(4):e78. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000002157. Ann Surg. 2018. PMID: 28145978 No abstract available.
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Reply to: "Surgeon Volume Threshold for Total Thyroidectomy".Ann Surg. 2018 Apr;267(4):e78-e79. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000002161. Ann Surg. 2018. PMID: 29517563 No abstract available.
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