The effect of annual surgical caseload on the rates of in-hospital pneumonia and other in-hospital outcomes after radical prostatectomy.

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The effect of annual surgical caseload on the rates of in-hospital pneumonia and other in-hospital outcomes after radical prostatectomy. / Schmitges, Jan; Trinh, Quoc-Dien; Bianchi, Marco; Sun, Maxine; Abdollah, Firas; Ahyai, Sascha; Jeldres, Claudio; Steuber, Thomas; Perrotte, Paul; Shariat, Shahrokh F; Menon, Mani; Montorsi, Francesco; Graefen, Markus; Karakiewicz, Pierre I.

In: INT UROL NEPHROL, 2012.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Schmitges, J, Trinh, Q-D, Bianchi, M, Sun, M, Abdollah, F, Ahyai, S, Jeldres, C, Steuber, T, Perrotte, P, Shariat, SF, Menon, M, Montorsi, F, Graefen, M & Karakiewicz, PI 2012, 'The effect of annual surgical caseload on the rates of in-hospital pneumonia and other in-hospital outcomes after radical prostatectomy.', INT UROL NEPHROL. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22160759?dopt=Citation>

APA

Schmitges, J., Trinh, Q-D., Bianchi, M., Sun, M., Abdollah, F., Ahyai, S., Jeldres, C., Steuber, T., Perrotte, P., Shariat, S. F., Menon, M., Montorsi, F., Graefen, M., & Karakiewicz, P. I. (2012). The effect of annual surgical caseload on the rates of in-hospital pneumonia and other in-hospital outcomes after radical prostatectomy. INT UROL NEPHROL. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22160759?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{644238f421154e499d04acaa28bcd9df,
title = "The effect of annual surgical caseload on the rates of in-hospital pneumonia and other in-hospital outcomes after radical prostatectomy.",
abstract = "PURPOSE: To examine the effect of annual surgical caseload (ASC) on contemporary in-hospital pneumonia (IHP) rates and three other in-hospital outcomes after radical prostatectomy (RP). METHODS: Between 1999 and 2008, 34,490 open RPs were performed in the state of Florida. First, logistic regression models predicting the rate of IHP were fitted. Second, other logistic regression models examined the association between IHP and three other outcomes: in-hospital mortality, hospital charges within the highest quartile, and length of stay (LOS) within the highest quartile. Covariates included ASC, age, race, baseline Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), interval between admission and surgery, as well as blood transfusion. RESULTS: The overall IHP rate was 0.5%. It was higher in patients operated within the low (0.7%) and intermediate (0.5%) ASC tertile versus high ASC tertile (0.2%, P <0.001). Mortality rate was 4.3% in IHP patients versus 0.1% in others (P <0.001). Median total hospital charges and median LOS were $55,350 versus $28,171 and 7 versus 3 days in IHP patients versus others, respectively (both P <0.001). In multivariable analyses predicting IHP, the likelihood was 3.2-fold in patients operated by low ASC surgeons versus high ASC surgeons (P <0.001). Second, in multivariable analyses, IHP patients were predisposed to 41-fold higher in-hospital mortality, were tenfold more likely to have total hospital charges >$37,333, and were 20-fold more likely to have a LOS >3 days (all P <0.001). CONCLUSIONS: RP by high ASC surgeons exerts a protective effect on IHP rates. Additionally, IHP is associated with higher in-hospital mortality, prolonged LOS, and higher hospital charges.",
author = "Jan Schmitges and Quoc-Dien Trinh and Marco Bianchi and Maxine Sun and Firas Abdollah and Sascha Ahyai and Claudio Jeldres and Thomas Steuber and Paul Perrotte and Shariat, {Shahrokh F} and Mani Menon and Francesco Montorsi and Markus Graefen and Karakiewicz, {Pierre I}",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
journal = "INT UROL NEPHROL",
issn = "0301-1623",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The effect of annual surgical caseload on the rates of in-hospital pneumonia and other in-hospital outcomes after radical prostatectomy.

AU - Schmitges, Jan

AU - Trinh, Quoc-Dien

AU - Bianchi, Marco

AU - Sun, Maxine

AU - Abdollah, Firas

AU - Ahyai, Sascha

AU - Jeldres, Claudio

AU - Steuber, Thomas

AU - Perrotte, Paul

AU - Shariat, Shahrokh F

AU - Menon, Mani

AU - Montorsi, Francesco

AU - Graefen, Markus

AU - Karakiewicz, Pierre I

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - PURPOSE: To examine the effect of annual surgical caseload (ASC) on contemporary in-hospital pneumonia (IHP) rates and three other in-hospital outcomes after radical prostatectomy (RP). METHODS: Between 1999 and 2008, 34,490 open RPs were performed in the state of Florida. First, logistic regression models predicting the rate of IHP were fitted. Second, other logistic regression models examined the association between IHP and three other outcomes: in-hospital mortality, hospital charges within the highest quartile, and length of stay (LOS) within the highest quartile. Covariates included ASC, age, race, baseline Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), interval between admission and surgery, as well as blood transfusion. RESULTS: The overall IHP rate was 0.5%. It was higher in patients operated within the low (0.7%) and intermediate (0.5%) ASC tertile versus high ASC tertile (0.2%, P <0.001). Mortality rate was 4.3% in IHP patients versus 0.1% in others (P <0.001). Median total hospital charges and median LOS were $55,350 versus $28,171 and 7 versus 3 days in IHP patients versus others, respectively (both P <0.001). In multivariable analyses predicting IHP, the likelihood was 3.2-fold in patients operated by low ASC surgeons versus high ASC surgeons (P <0.001). Second, in multivariable analyses, IHP patients were predisposed to 41-fold higher in-hospital mortality, were tenfold more likely to have total hospital charges >$37,333, and were 20-fold more likely to have a LOS >3 days (all P <0.001). CONCLUSIONS: RP by high ASC surgeons exerts a protective effect on IHP rates. Additionally, IHP is associated with higher in-hospital mortality, prolonged LOS, and higher hospital charges.

AB - PURPOSE: To examine the effect of annual surgical caseload (ASC) on contemporary in-hospital pneumonia (IHP) rates and three other in-hospital outcomes after radical prostatectomy (RP). METHODS: Between 1999 and 2008, 34,490 open RPs were performed in the state of Florida. First, logistic regression models predicting the rate of IHP were fitted. Second, other logistic regression models examined the association between IHP and three other outcomes: in-hospital mortality, hospital charges within the highest quartile, and length of stay (LOS) within the highest quartile. Covariates included ASC, age, race, baseline Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), interval between admission and surgery, as well as blood transfusion. RESULTS: The overall IHP rate was 0.5%. It was higher in patients operated within the low (0.7%) and intermediate (0.5%) ASC tertile versus high ASC tertile (0.2%, P <0.001). Mortality rate was 4.3% in IHP patients versus 0.1% in others (P <0.001). Median total hospital charges and median LOS were $55,350 versus $28,171 and 7 versus 3 days in IHP patients versus others, respectively (both P <0.001). In multivariable analyses predicting IHP, the likelihood was 3.2-fold in patients operated by low ASC surgeons versus high ASC surgeons (P <0.001). Second, in multivariable analyses, IHP patients were predisposed to 41-fold higher in-hospital mortality, were tenfold more likely to have total hospital charges >$37,333, and were 20-fold more likely to have a LOS >3 days (all P <0.001). CONCLUSIONS: RP by high ASC surgeons exerts a protective effect on IHP rates. Additionally, IHP is associated with higher in-hospital mortality, prolonged LOS, and higher hospital charges.

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

JO - INT UROL NEPHROL

JF - INT UROL NEPHROL

SN - 0301-1623

ER -