Profiling Hospitals on Bariatric Surgery Quality: Which Outcomes Are Most Reliable? - 19/09/14
Abstract |
Background |
Under the Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Accreditation and Quality Improvement Program, hospitals will receive risk-adjusted outcomes feedback for peer comparisons and benchmarking. It remains uncertain whether bariatric outcomes have adequate reliability to identify outlying performance, especially for hospitals with low caseloads that will be included in the program. We explored the ability of risk-adjusted outcomes to identify outlying hospital performance with bariatric surgery for a range of hospital caseloads.
Study Design |
We used the 2010 State Inpatient Databases for 12 states (N = 31,240 patients) to assess different outcomes (eg, complications, reoperation, and mortality) after bariatric stapling procedures. We first quantified outcomes reliability on a 0 (no reliability) to 1 (perfect reliability) scale. We then assessed whether risk- and reliability-adjusted outcomes could identify outlying performance among hospitals with different annual caseloads.
Results |
Overall and serious complications had the highest overall reliability, but this was heavily dependent on caseload. For example, among hospitals with the lowest caseloads (mean 56 cases/year), reliability for overall complications was 0.49 and 6.0% of hospitals had outlying performance. For hospitals with the highest caseloads (mean 298 cases/year), reliability for overall complications was 0.79 and 30.3% of hospitals had outlying performance. Reoperation had adequate reliability for hospitals with caseloads higher than 120 cases/year. Mortality had unacceptably low reliability regardless of hospital caseloads.
Conclusions |
Overall complications and serious complications have adequate reliability for distinguishing outlying performance with bariatric surgery, even for hospitals with low annual caseloads. Rare outcomes, such as reoperations, have inadequate reliability to inform peer-based comparisons for hospitals with low annual caseloads, and mortality has unacceptably low reliability for bariatric performance profiling.
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Disclosure Information: Nothing to disclose. |
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Disclosures outside the scope of this work: Dr Dimick has a financial interest in Arbormetrix, Inc., which had no role in this study. Dr Krell received payment from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan for data entry, unrelated to this work. |
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Support: Dr Krell receives support from NIH grant 5T32CA009672-22. The funding organizations had no role in the concept or design of the study, or in the collection, analysis, or interpretation of the data, or in the drafting or review of the manuscript. |
Vol 219 - N° 4
P. 725 - octobre 2014 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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