4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Surgeon experience association with patient selection and outcomes after open abdominal aortic aneurysm repair

Journal

JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY
Volume 72, Issue 4, Pages 1325-+

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jvs.2019.12.031

Keywords

Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair; Surgeon experience; Volume; Outcomes

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Background: Growing calls for guidelines advocating minimum annual case volumes for surgeon credentialing remain controversial. Although most attention to date has focused on the impact of obligatory case volume, less attention has been devoted to the more complex association between surgeon years of independent practice experience and procedure outcomes after open abdominal aortic aneurysm repair (OAR). Therefore, the purpose of this study was to explore the association of surgeon experience with case selection and real-world outcomes after OAR. Methods: All Society for Vascular Surgery-Vascular Quality Initiative infrarenal and juxtarenal OARs (n = 11,900; 71% elective; 29% nonelective) from 2003 to 2019 were examined. Surgeon experience was defined by years in practice after training completion. Experience level at time of repair was categorized (<= 5 years, n = 1048; 6-10 years, n = 1309; 11-15 years, n = 1244; and >= 16 years, n = 4772) and intergroup univariate comparisons were made. Logistic regression identified independent predictors of complications, 30-day death, and 1-year mortality. Models were constructed with or without surgeon experience strata to determine association with outcomes. Results: Increasing surgeon experience was associated with performing greater proportions of elective procedures, whereas less experienced surgeons had disproportionate exposure to nonelective operations (elective, 73% >= 16 years vs 62% <= 5 years [P < .0001]; nonelective, <= 5 years, 38% vs 27%, >= 16-years [P < .0001]). Among surgeons who perform five or fewer cases per year, the risk of any aggregate major complication after elective OAR decreased significantly as experience increased (P = .0004), although no differences were detected in nonelective cases or among higher volume surgeons. Similarly, the risk of in-hospital death decreased with increasing experience (P = .004), but only among low-volume surgeons performing elective procedures. Comorbidities were similar across all experience strata for both elective and nonelective presentations; however, more experienced surgeons operated on higher proportions of nonelective patients with coronary disease (P = .04). Early career surgeons more frequently operated on patients with American Society of Anesthesiologists IV designation, larger abdominal aortic aneurysm diameters and used suprarenal/celiac cross-clamps more frequently than later career surgeons. The 1-year survival after elective and nonelective OAR was not impacted by surgeon experience (P-trend > .15 for all comparisons). Conclusions: Increasing surgeon years of practice experience correlated significantly with a reduced risk of developing multiple postoperative complications, including postoperative death in the elective setting. Surgeons within their first 5 years of practice are exposed to greater proportions of nonelective cases but seem to have similar outcomes after these repairs compared with surgeons with more experience. Notably, surgeons in their first 5 years of practice operate on more complex elective patients as underscored by higher aggregate comorbidity scores, larger aneurysm diameters, and need for suprarenal aortic cross-clamping. These data have important implications on training paradigms, faculty recruitment, and the organization of mentorship when on boarding new surgeons.

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