Influence of experience on performance of individual surgeons in thyroid surgery: prospective cross sectional multicentre study
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_46EE320FD726
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Influence of experience on performance of individual surgeons in thyroid surgery: prospective cross sectional multicentre study
Journal
BMJ
Working group(s)
CATHY Research Group
ISSN
0959-8138
1468-5833
1468-5833
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/01/2012
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
344
Number
jan10 2
Pages
d8041-d8041
Language
english
Notes
Multicenter Study; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Abstract
Objective: To determine the association between surgeons' experience and postoperative complications in thyroid surgery.
Design: Prospective cross sectional multicentre study.
Setting: High volume referral centres in five academic hospitals in France.
Participants: All patients who underwent a thyroidectomy undertaken by every surgeon in these hospitals from 1 April 2008 to 31 December 2009.
Main outcome measures: Presence of two permanent major complications (recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy or hypoparathyroidism), six months after thyroid surgery. We used mixed effects logistic regression to determine the association between length of experience and postoperative complications.
Results: 28 surgeons completed 3574 thyroid procedures during a one year period. Overall rates of recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy and hypoparathyroidism were 2.08% (95% confidence interval 1.53% to 2.67%) and 2.69% (2.10% to 3.31%), respectively. In a multivariate analysis, 20 years or more of practice was associated with increased probability of both recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy (odds ratio 3.06 (1.07 to 8.80), P=0.04) and hypoparathyroidism (7.56 (1.79 to 31.99), P=0.01). Surgeons' performance had a concave association with their length of experience (P=0.036) and age (P=0.035); surgeons aged 35 to 50 years had better outcomes than their younger and older colleagues.
Conclusions: Optimum individual performance in thyroid surgery cannot be passively achieved or maintained by accumulating experience. Factors contributing to poor performance in very experienced surgeons should be explored further.
Design: Prospective cross sectional multicentre study.
Setting: High volume referral centres in five academic hospitals in France.
Participants: All patients who underwent a thyroidectomy undertaken by every surgeon in these hospitals from 1 April 2008 to 31 December 2009.
Main outcome measures: Presence of two permanent major complications (recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy or hypoparathyroidism), six months after thyroid surgery. We used mixed effects logistic regression to determine the association between length of experience and postoperative complications.
Results: 28 surgeons completed 3574 thyroid procedures during a one year period. Overall rates of recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy and hypoparathyroidism were 2.08% (95% confidence interval 1.53% to 2.67%) and 2.69% (2.10% to 3.31%), respectively. In a multivariate analysis, 20 years or more of practice was associated with increased probability of both recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy (odds ratio 3.06 (1.07 to 8.80), P=0.04) and hypoparathyroidism (7.56 (1.79 to 31.99), P=0.01). Surgeons' performance had a concave association with their length of experience (P=0.036) and age (P=0.035); surgeons aged 35 to 50 years had better outcomes than their younger and older colleagues.
Conclusions: Optimum individual performance in thyroid surgery cannot be passively achieved or maintained by accumulating experience. Factors contributing to poor performance in very experienced surgeons should be explored further.
Keywords
General Earth and Planetary Sciences, General Environmental Science, General Medicine, General Medicine
Web of science
Publisher's website
Open Access
Yes
Funding(s)
OTHER//Programme de Recherche en Qualité Hospitalière (Preqhos)2007
Create date
03/11/2023 16:12
Last modification date
07/11/2023 8:11