Re. Glasgow et Sj. Mulvihill, HOSPITAL VOLUME INFLUENCES OUTCOME IN PATIENTS UNDERGOING PANCREATIC RESECTION FOR CANCER, Western journal of medicine, 165(5), 1996, pp. 294-300
Surgical resection is the only possibly curative treatment of malignan
t pancreatic neoplasms, but major pancreatic resection for cancer is a
ssociated with high rates of morbidity and mortality. The objective of
this study was to determine the relation between hospital volume and
outcome in patients undergoing pancreatic resection for malignancy in
California. Data were obtained from reports submitted to the Office of
Statewide Health Planning and Development by all California hospitals
from 1990 through 1994. Patient abstracts were analyzed for each of 1
,705 patients who underwent major pancreatic resection for malignancy.
Of the 298 reporting hospitals, 88% treated fewer than 2 patients per
year; these low-volume centers treated the majority of patients. High
-volume providers had significantly decreased operative mortality, com
plication-associated mortality, patient resource use, and total charge
s and were more likely than low-volume centers to discharge patients t
o home. These differences were not accounted for by patient mix. This
study supports the concept of regionalizing highrisk procedures in gen
eral surgery, such as major pancreatic resection for cancer.