4.6 Article

Microvascular decompression surgery in the United States, 1996 to 2000: Mortality rates, morbidity rates, and the effects of hospital and surgeon volumes

Journal

NEUROSURGERY
Volume 52, Issue 6, Pages 1251-1261

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1227/01.NEU.0000065129.25359.EE

Keywords

microvascular decompression; mortality rate; volume-outcome relationship

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Objective: Microvascular decompression (MVD) is associated with low mortality and morbidity rates at specialized centers, but many MVD procedures are performed outside such centers. We studied short-term end points MVD in a national hospital discharge database sample. METHODS: A retrospective cohoert study was performed by using a nationwide Inpatient sample, 1996 to 2000. RESULTS: The sample included 1326 MVD procedures for treatment neuralgia, 237 for treatment of hemifacial spasm, and 27 for treatment of glossopharyngeal neuralgia, performed at 305 hospitals by 277 identified surgeons. The mortality rate was 0.3%, and the rate of discharge other than to home was 3.8%. Neurological complications were coded in 1.7% of cases, hematomas in 0.5%, and facial palsies on 0.6%, with 0.4% of patients requiring ventriculostomies and 0.7% postoperative ventilation. Trigeminal nerve section was also coded for 3.4% of patients with trigeminal neuralgia, more commonly among older pateients (P = 0.08), among female patients (P = 0.03), and at teaching hospitals (P = 0.02). The median annual caseloads were 5 cases per hospital (range, 1-195 cases) and 3 cases per surgeon (range, 1-107 cases). With adjustment for age, sex, race, primary insurance, diagnosis (trigeminal neuralgia versus hemifacial spasm versus glossopharyngeal neuralgia), geographic region, admission type and source, and medical comorbidities, outcomes at discharg were superior at higher-volume hospitals (P = 0.006) and with higher-volume surgeons (P = 0.02). Complications were less frequent after surgery performed at high volume hospitals (P = 0.04) or by high-volume surgeons (P = 0.01). The rate of discharge other than to home was 5.1% for the lowest-volume-quartile hospitals, compared with 1.6% for the highest-volume-quartile hospitals, compared with 1.6% for the highest-volume-quartile hospitals. Volume and mortality rate were not significantly related, but three of the four deaths in the in the serier followed procedures performed by surgeons who had performed only one MVD procedure that year. Length of stay (median, 3d) and hospital volume were not significantly related. Hospital charges were slightly higher at higher-volume hospitals (P = 0.07). CONCLUSION: Although most MVD procedures in the United States are performed at low-volume centers, mortality rates remain low. Mortality rates are significantly lower at high-volume hospitals and with high-volume surgeons.

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