1. Surgeon experience contributes to improved outcomes in pancreatoduodenectomies at high risk for fistula development
- Author
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Fabio Casciani, Maxwell T. Trudeau, Horacio J. Asbun, Chad G. Ball, Claudio Bassi, Stephen W. Behrman, Adam C. Berger, Mark P. Bloomston, Mark P. Callery, John D. Christein, Massimo Falconi, Carlos Fernandez-del Castillo, Mary E. Dillhoff, Euan J. Dickson, Elijah Dixon, William E. Fisher, Michael G. House, Steven J. Hughes, Tara S. Kent, Giuseppe Malleo, Stefano Partelli, Ronald R. Salem, John A. Stauffer, Christopher L. Wolfgang, Amer H. Zureikat, Charles M. Vollmer, George Van Buren, Wande B. Pratt, Ammara A. Watkins, Joal D. Beane, Ammar A. Javed, Katherine E. Poruk, Kevin C. Soares, Vicente Valero, Zhi V. Fong, Mary E. Dilhoff, Ericka N. Haverick, Carl R. Schmidt, Robert H. Hollis, Jeffrey A. Drebin, Brett Ecker, Russell Lewis, Matthew McMillan, Benjamin Miller, Priya Puri, Thomas Seykora, Michael J. Sprys, Stacy J. Kowalsky, Laura Maggino, Roberto Salvia, Giulia Savegnago, Lorenzo Cinelli, Nigel B. Jamieson, Lavanniya K.P. Velu, John W. Kunstman, Casciani, Fabio, Trudeau, Maxwell T, Asbun, Horacio J, Ball, Chad G, Bassi, Claudio, Behrman, Stephen W, Berger, Adam C, Bloomston, Mark P, Callery, Mark P, Christein, John D, Falconi, Massimo, Fernandez-Del Castillo, Carlo, Dillhoff, Mary E, Dickson, Euan J, Dixon, Elijah, Fisher, William E, House, Michael G, Hughes, Steven J, Kent, Tara S, Malleo, Giuseppe, Partelli, Stefano, Salem, Ronald R, Stauffer, John A, Wolfgang, Christopher L, Zureikat, Amer H, and Vollmer, Charles M
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fistula ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,MEDLINE ,surgical experience ,Analysis models ,Outcome assessment ,Risk Assessment ,Pancreaticoduodenectomy ,Pancreatic Fistula ,Postoperative Complications ,pancreatic fistula ,Blood loss ,Risk Factors ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Quality of Health Care ,Surgeons ,Framingham Risk Score ,pancreatoduodenectomy ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Gastroenterology ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Quality Improvement ,pancreatoduodenectomy, pancreatic fistula, surgical experience ,Pancreatic fistula ,Female ,Surgery ,Clinical Competence ,Risk assessment ,business - Abstract
Background: Pancreatoduodenectomies at high risk for clinically relevant pancreatic fistula are uncommon, yet intimidating, situations. In such scenarios, the impact of individual surgeon experience on outcomes is poorly understood.Methods: The fistula risk score was applied to identify high-risk patients (fistula risk score 7-10) from 7,706 pancreatoduodenectomies performed at 18 international institutions (2003-2020). For each case, surgeon pancreatoduodenectomy career volume and years of practice were linked to intraoperative fistula mitigation strategy adoption and outcomes. Consequently, best operative approaches for clinically relevant pancreatic fistula prevention and best performer profiles were identified through multivariable analysis models.Results: Eight hundred and thirty high-risk pancreatoduodenectomies, performed by 64 surgeons, displayed an overall clinically relevant pancreatic fistula rate of 33.7%. Clinically relevant pancreatic fistula rates decreased with escalating surgeon career pancreatoduodenectomy (-49.7%) and career length (-41.2%; both P < .001), as did transfusion and reoperation rates, postoperative morbidity index, and duration of stay. Great experience (>400 pancreatoduodenectomies performed or >21-year-long career) was a significant predictor of clinically relevant pancreatic fistula prevention (odds ratio 0.52, 95% confidence interval 0.35-0.76) and was more often associated with pancreatojejunostomy reconstruc-tion and prophylactic octreotide omission, which were both independently associated with clinically relevant pancreatic fistula reduction. A risk-adjusted performance analysis also correlated with experi-ence. Moreover, minimizing blood loss (
- Published
- 2021