AI Article Synopsis

  • Increased surgeon volume is linked to better outcomes in orthopedic surgery, but the effect on total shoulder arthroplasty specifically was not well-studied prior to this research.
  • A large retrospective study used the PearlDiver Mariner database to analyze outcomes of shoulder arthroplasty from 2010 to 2022, focusing on the impact of surgeon volume on complication and reoperation rates.
  • Results showed that high-volume surgeons (performing 112+ cases) had significantly lower complication rates and better fellowship training compared to low-volume surgeons, and low-volume surgeons treated patients with more complex health issues.

Article Abstract

Background: Increased surgeon volume has been demonstrated to correlate with improved outcomes after orthopedic surgery. However, there is a lack of data demonstrating the effect of surgeon volume on outcomes after total shoulder arthroplasty.

Methods: The PearlDiver Mariner database was retrospectively queried from the years 2010 to 2022. Patients who underwent shoulder arthroplasty were selected using the Current Procedural Terminology code 23472 (total shoulder arthroplasty). Patients younger than 40 years, those who underwent revision arthroplasty, and cases of bilateral arthroplasty were excluded. In addition, cases with a history of fracture, infection, or malignancy before surgery were excluded. Only surgeons who performed a minimum of 10 cases were selected, and PearlDiver was queried using their provider ID codes. Primary outcome measures included 90-day, 1-year, and 2-year rates of complication and reoperation. A Bonferroni correction was used in which the significance threshold was set at P ≤ .00082.

Results: A total of 155,560 patients met inclusion criteria and were retained for analysis. The 90th percentile for surgeon volume was determined to be 112 cases during the study period. Surgeons above the 90th percentile (n = 340) operated on 68,531 patients, whereas surgeons below the 90th percentile (n = 3038) operated on 87,029 patients. Surgeons in the high-volume group were significantly more likely to have completed a Shoulder and Elbow fellowship (P < .001) and less likely to have no fellowship training or fellowship training outside of Shoulder and Elbow or Sports Medicine (P < .001). Low-volume surgeons operated on patients with higher baseline comorbidities (Charlson Comorbidity Index [CCI]: 2.01 vs. 1.85, P < .001). After adjusting for age, gender, CCI, obesity, and tobacco use, high-volume surgeons experienced lower rates of medical complications including renal failure (P < .001), anemia (P < .001), and urinary tract infection (P < .001). All-cause readmission (0.90, P < .001), reoperation at 90 days (odds ratio: 0.75, P < .001), and reoperation at 1 year (odds ratio: 0.86, P < .001) were significantly lower among high-volume surgeons. High-volume surgeons exhibited lower rates of various complications including prosthetic joint infection (90 days: P < .001, 1 year: P < .001, and 2 years: P < .001), periprosthetic fracture (90 days: P < .001, 1 year: P < .001, and 2 years: P < .001), and all complications (90 days: P < .001 and 1 year: P < .001).

Conclusions: Surgeons who perform a high volume of total shoulder arthroplasty are more likely to operate on healthier patients than surgeons who perform a lower volume of cases. When compared with low-volume surgeons, and after adjusting for age, gender, and CCI, high-volume surgeons have a significantly lower overall complication rate. Despite this lower complication rate, high-volume surgeons are responsible for a decreasing portion of shoulder arthroplasty since 2016.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jse.2024.07.025DOI Listing

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