Editor's Choice - Optimal Threshold for the Volume-Outcome Relationship After Open AAA Repair in the Endovascular Era : Analysis of the International Consortium of Vascular Registries

Show full item record



Permalink

http://hdl.handle.net/10138/332731

Citation

Scali , S T , Beck , A , Sedrakyan , A , Mao , J , Behrendt , C-A , Boyle , J R , Venermo , M , Faizer , R , Schermerhorn , M , Beiles , B , Szeberin , Z , Eldrup , N , Thomson , I , Cassar , K , Altreuther , M , Debus , S , Johal , A , Bjorck , M , Cronenwett , J L & Mani , K 2021 , ' Editor's Choice - Optimal Threshold for the Volume-Outcome Relationship After Open AAA Repair in the Endovascular Era : Analysis of the International Consortium of Vascular Registries ' , European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery , vol. 61 , no. 5 , pp. 747-755 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejvs.2021.02.018

Title: Editor's Choice - Optimal Threshold for the Volume-Outcome Relationship After Open AAA Repair in the Endovascular Era : Analysis of the International Consortium of Vascular Registries
Author: Scali, Salvatore T.; Beck, Adam; Sedrakyan, Art; Mao, Jialin; Behrendt, Christian-Alexander; Boyle, Jonathan R.; Venermo, Maarit; Faizer, Rumi; Schermerhorn, Marc; Beiles, Barry; Szeberin, Zoltan; Eldrup, Nikolaj; Thomson, Ian; Cassar, Kevin; Altreuther, Martin; Debus, Sebastian; Johal, Amundeep; Bjorck, Martin; Cronenwett, Jack L.; Mani, Kevin
Contributor organization: Verisuonikirurgian yksikkö
HUS Abdominal Center
Department of Surgery
Date: 2021-05
Language: eng
Number of pages: 9
Belongs to series: European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery
ISSN: 1078-5884
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejvs.2021.02.018
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/332731
Abstract: Objective: As open abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair (OAR) rates decline in the endovascular era, the endorsement of minimum volume thresholds for OAR is increasingly controversial, as this may affect credentialing and training. The purpose of this analysis was to identify an optimal centre volume threshold that is associated with the most significant mortality reduction after OAR, and to determine how this reflects contemporary practice. Methods: This was an observational study of OARs performed in 11 countries (2010 - 2016) within the International Consortium of Vascular Registry database (n = 178 302). The primary endpoint was post-operative in hospital mortality. Two different methodologies (area under the receiving operating curve optimisation and Markov chain Monte Carlo procedure) were used to determine the optimal centre volume threshold associated with the most significant mortality improvement. Results: In total, 154 912 (86.9%) intact and 23 390 (13.1%) ruptured AAAs were analysed. The majority (63.1%; n = 112 557) underwent endovascular repair (EVAR) (OAR 36.9%; n = 65 745). A significant inverse relationship between increasing centre volume and lower peri-operative mortality after intact and ruptured OAR was evident (p < .001) but not with EVAR. An annual centre volume of between 13 and 16 procedures per year was associated with the most significant mortality reduction after intact OAR (adjusted predicted mortality < 13 procedures/year 4.6% [95% confidence interval 4.0% - 5.2%] vs. = 13 procedures/year 3.1% [95% CI 2.8% - 3.5%]). With the increasing adoption of EVAR, the mean number of OARs per centre (intact + ruptured) decreased significantly (2010 - 2013 = 35.7; 2014 - 2016 = 29.8; p < .001). Only 23% of centres (n = 240/1 065) met the >= 13 procedures/year volume threshold, with significant variation between nations (Germany 11%; Denmark 100%). Conclusion: An annual centre volume of 13 - 16 OARs per year is the optimal threshold associated with the greatest mortality risk reduction after treatment of intact AAA. However, in the current endovascular era, achieving this threshold requires significant re-organisation of OAR practice delivery in many countries, and would affect provision of non-elective aortic services. Low volume centres continuing to offer OAR should aim to achieve mortality results equivalent to the high volume institution benchmark, using validated data from quality registries to track outcomes.
Subject: Open AAA repair
Threshold
Volume-Outcome
AORTIC-ANEURYSM REPAIR
POTENTIAL BENEFITS
HOSPITAL VOLUME
SURGERY
MORTALITY
CENTRALIZATION
ASSOCIATION
STANDARDS
3126 Surgery, anesthesiology, intensive care, radiology
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


Files in this item

Total number of downloads: Loading...

Files Size Format View
1_s2.0_S1078588421001684.pdf 478.4Kb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record