Since 1979, a host of studies
has suggested that people in need of surgery should search out a
hospital where a lot of surgeries of the required type are
performed (SN: 7/17/99, p. 44). At a place such as that, the
theory goes, the most experienced professionals will do the best
job. A new study finds that this so-called volume benefit may be
overrated for a common heart operation.
Physician Eric D. Peterson of the Duke Clinical Research
Institute in Durham, N.C., and his colleagues reviewed the
outcomes of 267,089 coronary artery bypass graft operations done
at 439 hospitals during 2000 and 2001.
In the Jan. 14 Journal of the American Medical
Association, the scientists report that the average death rate
within 30 days of getting bypass surgery was 2.7 percent
overall. In hospitals in which more than 450 such operations
were performed annually, the average rate was only modestly
lower, 2.4 percent. In hospitals doing fewer than 150
operations, the mortality rate was 3.5 percent.
Even this difference in average mortality rate
might be deceptive. Compared with the busier hospitals, those
hosting fewer surgeries treated a greater percentage of
high-risk patients, the authors note. This apparently boosted
those facilities' mortality rates among bypass-surgery patients.
Moreover, among patients under age 65, there
was no significant difference in death rates, the authors
report.
Peterson's team concludes that choosing a
hospital for a particular operation shouldn't be based solely on
the number of such surgeries performed there.
--N.S. |