Background: Studies reporting benchmark values for surgical procedures should provide instruments for comparison, gap analysis and adoption of corrective measures to improve the outcome. Methods: A systematic search was performed to identify articles containing the MESH terms “benchmarking” AND “hepatectomy”. An Institutional Review Board-approved database of all hepato-biliary surgical procedures, performed in a new tertiary referral surgical unit was used for benchmarking results with the values reported in the literature. Results: Five articles were suitable for benchmarking: 3 based benchmark values (BMV) on the 75th percentiles of surgical outcomes among high-volume centers, one study provided BMV on the “Achievable Bench-mark of Care” and one study provided BMV on the 75th percentiles through a Bayesian prediction. When we benchmarked our surgical experience of 320 hepatic resections, we found margins for improvement for open major hepatectomies and for laparoscopic multiple resections/concomitant bowel resections but it was impossible to compare homogeneous sub-groups of patients for most of the procedures due to the lack of high-quality literature data. Conclusion: Benchmarking a surgical experience with the BMV provided in literature was attempted but unfortunately the lack of a standardized way for conducting benchmark analysis did not allow, at present, reliable quality comparison and improvement.
Benchmarking a new tertiary referral center for hepato-biliary surgery through a critical systematic review of available literature / Ercolani G.; D'Acapito F.; Solaini L.; La Barba G.; Gardini A.; Fiorino L.; Cucchetti A.. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGERY. - ISSN 1743-9191. - STAMPA. - 84:(2020), pp. 78-84. [10.1016/j.ijsu.2020.10.014]
Benchmarking a new tertiary referral center for hepato-biliary surgery through a critical systematic review of available literature
Ercolani G.;Solaini L.
;Cucchetti A.
2020
Abstract
Background: Studies reporting benchmark values for surgical procedures should provide instruments for comparison, gap analysis and adoption of corrective measures to improve the outcome. Methods: A systematic search was performed to identify articles containing the MESH terms “benchmarking” AND “hepatectomy”. An Institutional Review Board-approved database of all hepato-biliary surgical procedures, performed in a new tertiary referral surgical unit was used for benchmarking results with the values reported in the literature. Results: Five articles were suitable for benchmarking: 3 based benchmark values (BMV) on the 75th percentiles of surgical outcomes among high-volume centers, one study provided BMV on the “Achievable Bench-mark of Care” and one study provided BMV on the 75th percentiles through a Bayesian prediction. When we benchmarked our surgical experience of 320 hepatic resections, we found margins for improvement for open major hepatectomies and for laparoscopic multiple resections/concomitant bowel resections but it was impossible to compare homogeneous sub-groups of patients for most of the procedures due to the lack of high-quality literature data. Conclusion: Benchmarking a surgical experience with the BMV provided in literature was attempted but unfortunately the lack of a standardized way for conducting benchmark analysis did not allow, at present, reliable quality comparison and improvement.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.