Case Volume and Mortality in Pediatric Cardiac Surgery Patients in California, 1998–2003
- 22 May 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 115 (20) , 2652-2659
- https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.106.678904
Abstract
Background— Previous reports have found an inverse relationship between pediatric cardiac surgery case volume and in-hospital mortality. This association has been noted recently to be decreasing for coronary artery bypass grafting, possibly because of improved training programs, quality improvement activities, or other innovations to improve outcomes. It is unknown whether the volume-mortality association among pediatric cardiac surgery patients is decreasing similarly. Methods and Results— We used data from the state of California’s patient discharge data set from the years 1998–2003 to replicate 4 previous research studies of pediatric cardiac surgery volume and mortality. The total number of pediatric surgeries varied from 12 801 to 13 971 depending on the selection criteria applied. Using this larger and more contemporary data set, we found a weaker and less consistent volume-mortality relationship than had been reported previously. We also developed a new model, which incorporated elements of the old models, and found a statistically significant relationship with higher volume and lower mortality (odds ratio=0.86 per 100-patient increase in annual volume; 95% CI, 0.81 to 0.92). Post hoc analyses show that this relationship was related to the performance of the single largest-volume hospital. Conclusions— With the use of data from California, the volume-mortality relationship among pediatric cardiac surgery patients has changed since previous research, such that the old models no longer describe a clear or consistent association. With the use of a continuous definition of volume and an updated model, an association is observed but is dependent on highly leveraged covariate patterns found in the largest-volume hospital.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Administrative Versus Clinical Data for Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery Report CardsMedical Care, 2006
- The Aristotle score: a complexity-adjusted method to evaluate surgical resultsPublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,2004
- The Relation Between Trauma Center Outcome and Volume in the National Trauma DatabankPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,2004
- Procedural Volume as a Marker of Quality for CABG SurgeryJAMA, 2004
- Is Volume Related to Outcome in Health Care? A Systematic Review and Methodologic Critique of the LiteratureAnnals of Internal Medicine, 2002
- Can Regionalization Decrease the Number of Deaths for Children Who Undergo Cardiac Surgery? A Theoretical AnalysisPediatrics, 2002
- Cardiac surgery report cards: comprehensive review and statistical critiqueThe Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 2001
- Volume and outcome in coronary artery bypass graft surgery: true association or artefact?BMJ, 1995
- Best Subsets Logistic RegressionBiometrics, 1989
- The meaning and use of the area under a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve.Radiology, 1982