
Hospital Variation in Cholecystectomies in The Netherlands: A Nationwide Observational Study
Author(s) -
Carmen S S Latenstein,
Sarah Z. Wennmacker,
Stef Groenewoud,
Mark W. Noordenbos,
Femke Atsma,
Philip R. de Reuver
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
digestive surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.762
H-Index - 69
eISSN - 1421-9983
pISSN - 0253-4886
DOI - 10.1159/000510503
Subject(s) - medicine , cholecystectomy , gallstones , general surgery
Background: Practice variation generally raises concerns about the quality of care. This study determined the longitudinal degree of hospital variation in proportion of patients with gallstone disease undergoing cholecystectomy, while adjusted for case-mix, and the effect on clinical outcomes. Methods: A nationwide, longitudinal, database study was performed in all hospitals in the Netherlands in 2013–2015. Patients with gallstone disease were collected from the diagnosis-related group database. Hospital variation in case-mix-adjusted cholecystectomy rates was calculated per year. Clinical outcomes after cholecystectomy were compared between hospitals in the lowest/highest 20th percentile of the distribution of adjusted cholecystectomy rates in all 3 subsequent years. Results: In total, 96,673 patients with gallstones were included. The cholecystectomy rate was 73.6%. In 2013–2015, the case-mix-adjusted performance of cholecystectomies was in hospitals with high rates 1.5–1.6 times higher than in hospitals with low rates. Hospitals with a high adjusted cholecystectomy rate had a higher laparoscopy rate, shorter time to surgery, and less emergency department visits after a cholecystectomy compared to hospitals with a low-adjusted cholecystectomy rate. Conclusion: Hospital variation in cholecystectomies in the Netherlands is modest, cholecystectomy rates varies by <2-fold, and variation is stable over time. Cholecystectomies in hospitals with high adjusted cholecystectomy rates are associated with improved outcomes.