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Hospital volume and outcome in inguinal hernia repair: analysis of routine data of 133,449 patients

INTRODUCTION: Inguinal hernias are repaired using either open or minimally invasive surgical techniques. For both types of surgery it has been demonstrated that a higher annual surgeon volume is associated with a lower risk of recurrence. This present study investigated the volume-outcome implicatio...

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Autores principales: Maneck, M., Köckerling, F., Fahlenbrach, C., Heidecke, C. D., Heller, G., Meyer, H. J., Rolle, U., Schuler, E., Waibel, B., Jeschke, E., Günster, C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Paris 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7395912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31786700
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10029-019-02091-8
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author Maneck, M.
Köckerling, F.
Fahlenbrach, C.
Heidecke, C. D.
Heller, G.
Meyer, H. J.
Rolle, U.
Schuler, E.
Waibel, B.
Jeschke, E.
Günster, C.
author_facet Maneck, M.
Köckerling, F.
Fahlenbrach, C.
Heidecke, C. D.
Heller, G.
Meyer, H. J.
Rolle, U.
Schuler, E.
Waibel, B.
Jeschke, E.
Günster, C.
author_sort Maneck, M.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Inguinal hernias are repaired using either open or minimally invasive surgical techniques. For both types of surgery it has been demonstrated that a higher annual surgeon volume is associated with a lower risk of recurrence. This present study investigated the volume-outcome implications for recurrence operations, surgical complications, rate of chronic pain requiring treatment, and 30-day mortality based on the hospital volume. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The data basis used was the routine data collected throughout the Federal Republic of Germany for persons insured by the Local General Sickness Fund “AOK” who had undergone inpatient inguinal hernia repair between 2013 and 2015. Complications were recorded by means of indicators. Hospitals were divided into five groups on the basis of the annual caseload volume: 1–50, 51–75, 76–100, 101–125, and ≥ 126 inguinal hernia repairs per year. The effect of the hospital volume on the indicators was assessed using multiple logistic regression. RESULTS: 133,449 inguinal hernia repairs were included. The incidence for recurrence operations was 0.95%, for surgical complications 4.22%, for chronic pain requiring treatment 2.87%, and for the 30-day mortality 0.28%. Low volume hospitals (1–50 and 51–75 inguinal hernia repairs per year) showed a significantly increased recurrence risk compared to high volume hospitals with ≥ 126 inguinal hernia repairs per year (odds ratio: 1.53 and 1.24). No significant correlations were found for the other results. CONCLUSIONS: The study gives a detailed picture of hospital care for inguinal hernia repair in Germany. Furthermore, it was noted that the risk of hernia recurrence decreases in line with a rising caseload of the treating hospital.
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spelling pubmed-73959122020-08-18 Hospital volume and outcome in inguinal hernia repair: analysis of routine data of 133,449 patients Maneck, M. Köckerling, F. Fahlenbrach, C. Heidecke, C. D. Heller, G. Meyer, H. J. Rolle, U. Schuler, E. Waibel, B. Jeschke, E. Günster, C. Hernia Original Article INTRODUCTION: Inguinal hernias are repaired using either open or minimally invasive surgical techniques. For both types of surgery it has been demonstrated that a higher annual surgeon volume is associated with a lower risk of recurrence. This present study investigated the volume-outcome implications for recurrence operations, surgical complications, rate of chronic pain requiring treatment, and 30-day mortality based on the hospital volume. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The data basis used was the routine data collected throughout the Federal Republic of Germany for persons insured by the Local General Sickness Fund “AOK” who had undergone inpatient inguinal hernia repair between 2013 and 2015. Complications were recorded by means of indicators. Hospitals were divided into five groups on the basis of the annual caseload volume: 1–50, 51–75, 76–100, 101–125, and ≥ 126 inguinal hernia repairs per year. The effect of the hospital volume on the indicators was assessed using multiple logistic regression. RESULTS: 133,449 inguinal hernia repairs were included. The incidence for recurrence operations was 0.95%, for surgical complications 4.22%, for chronic pain requiring treatment 2.87%, and for the 30-day mortality 0.28%. Low volume hospitals (1–50 and 51–75 inguinal hernia repairs per year) showed a significantly increased recurrence risk compared to high volume hospitals with ≥ 126 inguinal hernia repairs per year (odds ratio: 1.53 and 1.24). No significant correlations were found for the other results. CONCLUSIONS: The study gives a detailed picture of hospital care for inguinal hernia repair in Germany. Furthermore, it was noted that the risk of hernia recurrence decreases in line with a rising caseload of the treating hospital. Springer Paris 2019-11-30 2020 /pmc/articles/PMC7395912/ /pubmed/31786700 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10029-019-02091-8 Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Original Article
Maneck, M.
Köckerling, F.
Fahlenbrach, C.
Heidecke, C. D.
Heller, G.
Meyer, H. J.
Rolle, U.
Schuler, E.
Waibel, B.
Jeschke, E.
Günster, C.
Hospital volume and outcome in inguinal hernia repair: analysis of routine data of 133,449 patients
title Hospital volume and outcome in inguinal hernia repair: analysis of routine data of 133,449 patients
title_full Hospital volume and outcome in inguinal hernia repair: analysis of routine data of 133,449 patients
title_fullStr Hospital volume and outcome in inguinal hernia repair: analysis of routine data of 133,449 patients
title_full_unstemmed Hospital volume and outcome in inguinal hernia repair: analysis of routine data of 133,449 patients
title_short Hospital volume and outcome in inguinal hernia repair: analysis of routine data of 133,449 patients
title_sort hospital volume and outcome in inguinal hernia repair: analysis of routine data of 133,449 patients
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7395912/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31786700
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10029-019-02091-8
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