• Br J Surg · Jun 2010

    Review Meta Analysis

    Systematic review and meta-analysis of the relationship between hospital volume and outcome for lower limb arterial surgery.

    • A I Awopetu, P Moxey, R J Hinchliffe, K G Jones, M M Thompson, and P J E Holt.
    • Department of Outcomes Research, St George's Vascular Institute, St George's Healthcare NHS Trust, London SW17 0QT, UK.
    • Br J Surg. 2010 Jun 1; 97 (6): 797803797-803.

    Background: The aim was to investigate whether a relationship existed between case volume and outcome for lower limb vascular surgical procedures.Methods: PubMed, Embase, the Cochrane Library and Google Scholar were searched for all articles on population-based studies on the volume-outcome relationship for lower limb vascular surgery at hospital level. Outcomes were mortality and subsequent amputation after lower limb vascular surgery. The data were subjected to meta-analysis by outcome.Results: Some 452 093 patients from ten studies were included in the systematic review and five studies were included in meta-analyses. Seven of these articles found a significant positive hospital-volume outcome relationship. The pooled effect estimate for mortality was odds ratio (OR) 0.81 (95 per cent confidence interval 0.71 to 0.91) and that for amputation was OR 0.88 (0.79 to 0.98), with better results being found after surgery at higher-volume hospitals. Significant heterogeneity was seen in the data.Conclusion: Higher-volume hospitals were associated with reduced amputation and mortality rates after lower limb vascular surgery. These data were not as conclusive as those for other vascular surgical procedures owing to significant heterogeneity.

      Pubmed     Copy Citation     Plaintext  

      Add institutional full text...

    Notes

     
    Knowledge, pearl, summary or comment to share?
    300 characters remaining
    help        
    You can also include formatting, links, images and footnotes in your notes
    • Simple formatting can be added to notes, such as *italics*, _underline_ or **bold**.
    • Superscript can be denoted by <sup>text</sup> and subscript <sub>text</sub>.
    • Numbered or bulleted lists can be created using either numbered lines 1. 2. 3., hyphens - or asterisks *.
    • Links can be included with: [my link to pubmed](http://pubmed.com)
    • Images can be included with: ![alt text](https://bestmedicaljournal.com/study_graph.jpg "Image Title Text")
    • For footnotes use [^1](This is a footnote.) inline.
    • Or use an inline reference [^1] to refer to a longer footnote elseweher in the document [^1]: This is a long footnote..

    hide…