Back to Search Start Over

Evaluating the impact of surgical supply cost variation during partial nephrectomy on patient outcomes

Authors :
Alexander Bell
Anobel Y. Odisho
Arthur H. Baghdanian
Maxwell V. Meng
Ashwin S. Balakrishnan
Lindsay A. Hampson
Armonde A. Baghdanian
Source :
Transl Androl Urol, Translational andrology and urology, vol 10, iss 2
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
AME Publishing Company, 2021.

Abstract

Background Reducing surgical supply costs can help to lower hospital expenditures. We aimed to evaluate whether variation in supply costs between urologic surgeons performing both robotic or open partial nephrectomies is associated with differential patient outcomes. Methods In this retrospective cohort study, we reviewed 399 consecutive robotic (n=220) and open (n=179) partial nephrectomies performed at an academic center. Surgical supply costs were determined at the institution-negotiated rate. Through retrospective review, we identified factors related to case complexity, patient comorbidity, and perioperative outcomes. Two radiologists assigned nephrometry scores to grade tumor complexity. We created univariate and multivariable models for predictors of supply costs, length of stay, and change in serum creatinine. Results Median supply cost was $3,201 [interquartile range (IQR): $2,201-3,808] for robotic partial nephrectomy and $968 (IQR: $819-1,772) for open partial nephrectomy. Mean nephrometry score was 7.0 (SD =1.7) for robotic procedures and 8.2 (SD =1.6) for open procedures. In multivariable models, the surgeon was the primary significant predictor of variation in surgical supply costs for both procedure types. In multivariable mixed-effects analysis with surgeon as a random effect, supply cost was not a significant predictor of change in serum creatinine for robotic or open procedures. Supply cost was not a statistically significant predictor of length of stay for the open procedure. Supply cost was a significant predictor of longer length of stay for the robotic procedure, however it was not a clinically meaningful change in length of stay (0.02 days per $100 in supply costs). Conclusions Higher supply spending did not predict significantly improved patient outcomes. Variability in surgeon supply preference is the likely source of variability in supply cost. These data suggest that efforts to promote cost-effective utilization and standardization of supplies in partial nephrectomy could help reduce costs without harming patients.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transl Androl Urol, Translational andrology and urology, vol 10, iss 2
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a1dc6ef58a4ac1297a745d0ab78f56ef