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Effect of monitoring surgical outcomes using control charts to reduce major adverse events in patients: cluster randomised trial

Authors :
Duclos, Antoine
Chollet, François
Pascal, Léa
Ormando, Hector
Carty, Matthew J
Polazzi, Stéphanie
Lifante, Jean-Christophe
Bourgoin, Françoise
Holla, Housseyni
Steunou, Sandra
Naudot, Clotilde
Lacombe, Isabelle
Lefevre, Jérémie
Arimont, Jean-Marc
Foulkes, Charles
David, Patrice
Neyer, Laurence
Gayet, Clément
Hemet, Sandrine
Le Menn, Loïc
Serra-Maudet, Valérie
Abet, Emeric
Poussier, Matthieu
Broli, Jérôme
Papaleo, Domenico
Proske, Jan Martin
Filippi, Valérie
Mazza, Davide
Fraleu Louër, Bénédicte
Gratien, Dominique
Poirier, Hélène
Alves-Neto, Béatrice
Fixot, Kévin
Hournau, Matthieu
Regimbeau, Jean-Marc
Bouviez, Nicolas
Marion, Yoann
Dubois, Anne
Perret-Boire, Sophie
Pezet, Denis
Mariette, Christophe
Brunaud, Laurent
Germain, Adeline
Podevin, Juliette
Riegler, Edwige
Debs, Tarek
Gauzolino, Riccardo
Kianmanesh, Reza
Brek, Amine
Kirzin, Sylvain
Bourdet, Benoît
Suc, Bertrand
Brachet, Dorothée
Cojocarasu, Dumitru
Granger, Philippe
Bageacu, Serban
Bourbon, Michel
Bertolaso, Walter
Caillon, Pierre
Lupinacci, Renato
Oberlin, Olivier
Champault, Axèle
Sigismond, Monique
Frileux, Pascal
Rault, Alexandre
Bourdariat, Raphaël
Lamblin, Antoine
Leclercq, Christine
Pol, Bernard
Adam, Mathilde
Poncet, Gilles
Valette-Lagnel, Catherine
Colin, Cyrille
Mensah, Keitly
Michel, Philippe
Payet, Cécile
Couraud, Sébastien
Passot, Guillaume
Peix, Jean-Louis
Piriou, Vincent
Beau, Cédric
Benand, Philippe
Brugiere, Benjamin
Koriche, Dine
Source :
The BMJ
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ, 2020.

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the effect of introducing prospective monitoring of outcomes using control charts and regular feedback on indicators to surgical teams on major adverse events in patients.DesignNational, parallel, cluster randomised trial embedding a difference-in-differences analysis.Setting40 surgical departments of hospitals across France.Participants155 362 adults who underwent digestive tract surgery. 20 of the surgical departments were randomised to prospective monitoring of outcomes using control charts with regular feedback on indicators (intervention group) and 20 to usual care only (control group).InterventionsProspective monitoring of outcomes using control charts, provided in sets quarterly, with regular feedback on indicators (intervention hospitals). To facilitate implementation of the programme, study champion partnerships were established at each site, comprising a surgeon and another member of the surgical team (surgeon, anaesthetist, or nurse), and were trained to conduct team meetings, display posters in operating rooms, maintain a logbook, and devise an improvement plan.Main outcome measuresThe primary outcome was a composite of major adverse events (inpatient death, intensive care stay, reoperation, and severe complications) within 30 days after surgery. Changes in surgical outcomes were compared before and after implementation of the programme between intervention and control hospitals, with adjustment for patient mix and clustering.Results75 047 patients were analysed in the intervention hospitals (37 579 before and 37 468 after programme implementation) versus 80 315 in the control hospitals (41 548 and 38 767). After introduction of the control chart, the absolute risk of a major adverse event was reduced by 0.9% (95% confidence interval 0.4% to 1.4%) in intervention compared with control hospitals, corresponding to 114 patients (70 to 280) who needed to receive the intervention to prevent one major adverse event. A significant decrease in major adverse events (adjusted ratio of odds ratios 0.89, 95% confidence interval 0.83 to 0.96), patient death (0.84, 0.71 to 0.99), and intensive care stay (0.85, 0.76 to 0.94) was found in intervention compared with control hospitals. The same trend was observed for reoperation (0.91, 0.82 to 1.00), whereas severe complications remained unchanged (0.96, 0.87 to 1.07). Among the intervention hospitals, the effect size was proportional to the degree of control chart implementation witnessed. Highly compliant hospitals experienced a more important reduction in major adverse events (0.84, 0.77 to 0.92), patient death (0.78, 0.63 to 0.97), intensive care stay (0.76, 0.67 to 0.87), and reoperation (0.84, 0.74 to 0.96).ConclusionsThe implementation of control charts with feedback on indicators to surgical teams was associated with concomitant reductions in major adverse events in patients. Understanding variations in surgical outcomes and how to provide safe surgery is imperative for improvements.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT02569450.

Details

ISSN :
17561833 and 02569450
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4a8b947c92ade336f3fdfdb67578bb6a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m3840