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Annual surgical caseload and open radical prostatectomy outcomes: improving temporal trends

Authors :
Shahrokh F. Shariat
Lars Budäus
Maxine Sun
Markus Graefen
Kevin C. Zorn
Rodolphe Thuret
Monica Morgan
Pierre I. Karakiewicz
Firas Abdollah
Francesco Montorsi
Paul Perrotte
Rupinder Johal
Hendrik Isbarn
Budeaus, Lar
Abdollah, Fira
Sun, Maxine
Morgan, Monica
Johal, Rupinder
Thuret, Rodolphe
Zorn Kevin, C.
Isbarn, Hendrik
Shariat Shahrokh, F.
Montorsi, Francesco
Perrotte, Paul
Graefen, Marku
Karakiewicz Pierre, I.
Source :
The Journal of urology. 184(6)
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Purpose: Radical prostatectomy is the standard of care for localized prostate cancer. Numerous previous reports show the relationship between surgical experience and various outcomes. We examined the effect of surgical experience on complications and transfusion rates, and determined individual surgeon annual caseload trends in a contemporary radical prostatectomy cohort. Materials and Methods: We analyzed annual caseload temporal trends in 34,803 patients who underwent surgery between 1999 and 2008 in Florida. Logistic regression models controlled for clustering among surgeons addressed the relationship of surgical experience, defined as the number of radical prostatectomies done since January 1, 1999 until each radical prostatectomy, with complications and transfusions. Results: During the study period the proportion of surgeons in the high annual caseload tertile (24 radical prostatectomies or greater yearly) and the proportion of patients treated by those surgeons increased from 5% to 10% and from 20% to 55%, respectively. Conversely complication and transfusion rates decreased from 14.3% to 9.2% and 12.6% to 6.9%, respectively. Radical prostatectomies done by surgeons in the high surgical experience tertile (86 or greater radical prostatectomies) decreased the risk of any complication by 33% and of any transfusion by 30% vs those in patients operated on by surgeons in the low surgical experience tertile (27 or fewer radical prostatectomies). Conclusions: The proportion of surgeons in the high annual caseload tertile and the proportion of patients treated by these surgeons steadily increased during the last decade. Complication and transfusion rates decreased with time. The implications of these encouraging findings may result in improved outcomes in patients with surgically managed prostate cancer.

Details

ISSN :
15273792
Volume :
184
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of urology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c99a1f7a6c86617eb04c640e74e66dd8