The impact of surgeon volume on colostomy reversal outcomes after Hartmann's procedure for diverticulitis Article Proceedings Paper

cited authors

  • Aquina, Christopher T., Probst, Christian P., Becerra, Adan Z., Hensley, Bradley J., Iannuzzi, James C., Noyes, Katia, Monson, John R. T., Fleming, Fergal J.

abstract

  • Background. Colostomy reversal after Hartmann's procedure for diverticulitis is a morbid procedure, and studies investigating factors associated with outcomes are lacking. This study identifies patient, surgeon, and hospital-level factors associated with perioperative outcomes after stoma reversal. Methods. The Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System was queried for urgent/emergency Hartmann's procedures for diverticulitis between 2000-2012 in New York State and subsequent colostomy reversal within 1 year of the procedure. Surgeon and hospital volume were categorized into tertiles based on the annual number of colorectal resections performed each year. Bivariate and mixed effects analyses were used to assess the association between patient, surgeon, and hospital-level factors and perioperative outcomes after colostomy reversal, including a laparoscopic approach; duration of stay; intensive care unit admission; complications; mortality; and 30-day, unscheduled readmission. Results. Among 10,487 patients who underwent Hartmann's procedure and survived to discharge, 63% had the colostomy reversed within 1 year. After controlling for patient, surgeon, and hospital-level factors, high-volume surgeons (>= 40 colorectal resections/yr) were independently associated with higher odds of a laparoscopic approach (unadjusted rates: 14% vs 7.6%; adjusted odds ratio = 1.84, 95% confidence interval = 1.12, 3.00), shorter duration of stay (median: 6 versus 7 days; adjusted incidence rate ratio = 0.87, 95% confidence interval = 0.81, 0.95), and lower odds of 90-day mortality (unadjusted rates: 0.4% vs 1.0%; adjusted odds ratio = 0.30, 95 % confidence interval = 0.10, 0.88) compared with low-volume surgeons (1-15 colorectal resections/yr). Conclusion. High-volume surgeons are associated with better perioperative outcomes and lower health care utilization after Hartmann's reversal for diverticulitis. These findings support referral to high volume surgeons for colostomy reversal.

Publication Date

  • November 1, 2016

webpage

published in

category

  • SURGERY  Web of Science Category

start page

  • 1309

end page

  • 1317

volume

  • 160

issue

  • 5

WoS Citations

  • 4

WoS References

  • 38