By Duke Medicine News and Communications
Patients operated on by surgeons who do not routinely remove
cancer from the lungs may be at a higher risk for
complications, according to a study conducted by researchers at
Duke University Medical Center.
"Our study found that hospitals that do higher volumes of these
types of surgeries have correspondingly lower mortality rates
than those who do fewer of the procedures," said
Andrew Shaw,
MD, an anesthesiologist at Duke and lead investigator on
the study.
"This has important implications for both patients and doctors:
patients should choose a center that does these procedures
often, and doctors who are only doing a few of these a year
should consider either growing their practices, or focusing
their attention on other, less complex, types of
surgery."
The results of the study will be published in the December
issue of the journal Cancer Therapy, but they have already
appeared online on the journal's Web site. The study was funded
by Duke's department of anesthesiology.
The researchers used the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, a
publicly-available database of hospital admissions dating back
20 years and representing approximately 90 percent of hospitals
in the country, to examine death rates following three common
types of surgery for lung cancer -- pneumonectomy, in which the
whole lung is removed, lobectomy, in which a third to half of
the lung is removed, and segmental resection, in which a
smaller portion of the lung is removed. Over 130,000 patient
data samples were studied.
"Mortality is highest, for all three procedures, at
institutions which perform very few of these types of
operations," Shaw said. "Hospitals that perform 40 procedures
or more per year have the lowest mortality rates."
The study also found that mortality in teaching hospitals is
slightly lower than in non-teaching institutions.
"Patients are sometimes wary of having their surgery performed
at a teaching institution because they think they may be
operated on by an inexperienced trainee and this might lead to
a poorer outcome," Shaw said. "Actually, it appears that the
outcomes at teaching hospitals are no worse than at
non-teaching, or private, institutions."
"Other studies have confirmed these findings with regard to
other types of surgeries, and we thought it was important to
study these factors with respect to lung cancer surgery,
because this affects a large patient population," Shaw
said.
Approximately 180,000 new cases of lung cancer are diagnosed
each year in the United States and about 40 percent of those
diagnosed will undergo surgery as part of their
treatment.
Other researchers involved in this study include Madhav
Swaminathan, Barbara Phillips-Bute, Jon Halling, David Harpole,
Thomas D'Amico, Eric Toloza, Mark Onaitis and Mark
Stafford-Smith, all of Duke.