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Evaluating Postoperative Outcomes with Resident Involvement in Thyroid and Parathyroid Surgery: Analysis of National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Amy E. Murphy DO, Ashley M. Tameron MD, Lala R. Hussain MSc, Kevin J. Grannan MD Introduction • Surgical residency incorporates complex head and neck cases • Residents as part of the surgical team raise patient’s concerns in regard to adverse outcomes • Overall, data has shown residents are viewed by the patient population as assets however on specific injury about resident performance, confidence faltered • Limited outcome data of thyroid and parathyroid surgery related to resident participation makes relieving concerns difficult Introduction • The impact of resident involvement on postoperative outcomes in thyroid and parathyroid surgery has not been evaluated on a national scale with current data • We hypothesize that resident participation in neck endocrine surgery does not adversely impact outcomes Objective • To test our hypothesis, we utilized data from the ACS NSQIP and evaluated the influence of resident participation on postoperative outcomes following thyroid and parathyroid surgery Methods • Retrospective cohort analysis of NSQIP database • 2007 - 2010 • Identified cases with thyroid and parathyroid surgery • Primary Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes: • 60200, 60201, 60212, 60220, 60225, 60240, 60252, 60254, 60260, 60270, 60271, 60280, 60281, 60500, 60502 and 60505 • Cases were excluded if information regarding resident involvement was unknown or missing Methods • The outcomes measured included • Total operation time in minutes • Length of total hospital stay in days • Occurrences of unplanned intubation • Occurrences on a ventilator greater than 48 hours • Return to the operating room within 30 days of surgery Methods • Statistical Analysis • All variables were analyzed using descriptive statistics including mean, standard deviation (SD), and frequency distributions • The comparison of outcomes, with and without resident involvement, was performed using t-test for continuous variables and chi-squared test for categorical variables • All statistical analysis was performed using SPSS (version 22.0) with the significance level set at P < 0.05 Results Cases queried from American College of Surgeons NSQIP database. Resident Involvement CPT 60200 60210 60212 60220 60225 60240 60252 60254 60260 60270 60271 60280 60281 60500 60502 60505 All Yes 144 1082 163 6089 649 9921 2154 323 898 104 729 114 8 10191 542 56 33167 No 123 855 145 3420 321 4844 659 103 274 44 202 108 9 3560 87 28 14782 Total 267 1937 308 9509 970 14765 2813 426 1172 148 931 222 17 13751 629 84 47949 Results Demographic Age (yr) (mean ± SD) N (%) 47,949 53 ±14.85 Resident Present 33,167 Resident Not Present P value 14,782 53.52 ±14.81 54.35 ±14.93 <0.001 Male 10117 (21.2%) 7085 3032 Female 37696 (78.8%) 25990 11706 Diabetes 5681 (11.8%) 3807 (11.5%) 1874 (12.7%) <0.001 Smoker 7145 (14.9%) 4925 (14.8%) 2220 (15%) 0.631 Dyspnea 4212 (8.8%) 2918 (8.8%) 1294 (8.8%) 0.875 Ventilator dependent 35 (0.1%) 24 (0.1%) 11 (0.1%) 0.939 History of severe COPD 988 (2.1%) 653 (2%) 335 (2%) 0.034 Current PNA 27 (0.1%) 17 (0.1%) 10 (0.1%) 0.485 History of CHF 96 (0.2%) 69 (0.2%) 27 (0.2%) 0.566 MI (6mo prior to surgery) 96 (0.2%) 51 (0.2%) 13 (0.2%) 0.068 HTN requiring medications 20984 (43.8%) 14394 (43.4%) 6590 (44.6%) 0.016 Acute renal failure 93 (0.2%) 62 (0.2%) 31 (0.2%) 0.601 CVA/stroke 501 (1%) 353 (1.0%) 148 (1.0%) 0.530 Prior operation within 30 days 339 (0.7%) 243 (0.7%) 96 (0.6%) 0.315 Emergency case 146 (0.3%) 96 (0.3%) 50 (0.3%) 0.37 22202 (46.7%) 15178 (46.2%) 7024 (47.9%) 0.001 Obesity (BMI>30) Results Outcome Total operation time in minutes (mean ± SD) Length of hospital stay (mean ± SD) Occurrences of unplanned intubation Occurrences of ventilator >48 hours Return to OR within 30 days CI: 95% confidence interval OR: operating room Resident Not P value Present Odds Ratio 95% CI 109.15 114.06 98.24 ± < 0.001 54.43 ± 60.19 ± 61.89 0.13 [14.67-16.98] N (%) Resident Present 1.24 ± 3.55 1.25 ± 2.62 1.27 ± 2.62 0.66 -0.004 [-0.08-0.05] 165 (0.3%) 105 (0.3%) 60 (0.4%) 0.123 0.78 [0.57-1.07] 111 (0.2%) 83 (0.3%) 28 (0.2%) 0.201 1.32 [0.86-2.03] 1015 (2.1%) 657 (1.98%) 358 (2.4%) 0.002 0.81 [0.72-0.93] Discussion • Patients do not always anticipate resident’s involvement in their surgery which may lead to patient dissatisfaction, frustration and even refusal to allow resident participation • Our analysis focused on thyroid and parathyroid surgery • Overall, as similar to previous NSQIP based research regarding resident involvement, the outcomes were not worsened with resident involvement • Although the operative time was significantly increased with resident present, it did not lead to an increase in return to the operating room Discussion • Strength of this study is the volume of patients included over a large number of hospitals and over a span of four years • Limitations of this study include • Lack of ability to track recurrent laryngeal nerve injury and or hypoparathyroidism • Inability to view reasons why OR time was lengthened or return to OR was needed • Although the NSQIP database records indicated whether residents were involved, it does not allow us to quantify the degree of involvement of that particular resident Conclusion • Review of the NSQIP database demonstrates resident involvement in thyroid and parathyroid operations does not lead to increased adverse events, but does increase operative time • Resident participation may in fact lead to reduction of specific events including return to the operating room • This information can be conveyed to patients to help them feel more comfortable participating in the surgical education process 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 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