4.6 Article

An attempt to establish and apply global benchmarks for liver resection of malignant hepatic tumors

Journal

SURGERY
Volume 174, Issue 6, Pages 1384-1392

Publisher

MOSBY-ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.surg.2023.08.024

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Benchmarking helps guide quality improvement initiatives to enhance patient safety and surgical oncologic outcomes by comparing hospitals globally.
Background: Benchmarking is a process of continuous self-evaluation and comparison with best-in-class hospitals to guide quality improvement initiatives. We sought to define global benchmarks relative to liver resection for malignancy and to assess their achievement in hospitals in the United States.Methods: Patients who underwent curative-intent liver resection for hepatocellular carcinoma, intra-hepatic cholangiocarcinoma, or colorectal or neuroendocrine liver metastases between 2000 and 2019 were identified from an international multi-institutional database. Propensity score matching was conducted to balance baseline characteristics between open and minimally invasive approaches. Best-in -class hospitals were defined relative to the achievement rate of textbook oncologic outcomes and case volume. Benchmark values were established relative to best-in-class institutions. The achievement of benchmark values among hospitals in the National Cancer Database was then assessed.Results: Among 2,624 patients treated at 20 centers, a majority underwent liver resection for hepato-cellular carcinoma (n = 1,609, 61.3%), followed by colorectal liver metastases (n = 650, 24.8%), intra-hepatic cholangiocarcinoma (n = 299, 11.4%), and neuroendocrine liver metastases (n = 66, 2.5%). Notably, 1,947 (74.2%) patients achieved a textbook oncologic outcome. After propensity score matching, 6 best-in-class hospitals with the highest textbook oncologic outcome rates (>= 75.0%) were identified. Benchmark values were calculated for margin positivity (<11.7%), 30-day readmission (<4.1%), 30-day mortality (<1.6%), minor postoperative complications (<24.7%), severe complications (<12.4%), and failure to achieve the textbook oncologic outcome (<22.8%). Among the National Cancer Database hospitals, global benchmarks for margin positivity, 30-day readmission, 30-day mortality, severe com-plications, and textbook oncologic outcome failure were achieved in 62.9%, 27.1%, 12.1%, 7.1%, and 29.3% of centers, respectively.Conclusion: These global benchmarks may help identify hospitals that may benefit from quality improvement initiatives, aiming to improve patient safety and surgical oncologic outcomes.(c) 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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