Thomas Wolff1, Marc Schumacher2, Salome Dell-Kuster3, Rachel Rosenthal2, Michael Dickenmann4, Jürg Steiger4, Alexander Bachmann5, Lorenz Gürke2. 1. Department of Vascular and Transplant Surgery, Basel University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland. Electronic address: thomas.wolff@usb.ch. 2. Department of Vascular and Transplant Surgery, Basel University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland. 3. Department of Vascular and Transplant Surgery, Basel University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland; Basel Institute for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Basel, Switzerland. 4. Division of Transplantation Immunology and Nephrology, Basel University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland. 5. Department of Urology, Basel University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether surgical complications after kidney transplantation correlate with surgeon's experience and whether individual surgeons' complication rates improve during their learning process. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis: A generalized linear mixed-effects model was used to identify risk factors for surgical complications. Plots of cumulative sums of complications were used to evaluate the individual surgeons' performance. SETTING: Single-center experience of a teaching hospital in Switzerland. PARTICIPANTS: Consecutive kidney transplant recipients operated from 1962 until 2003. RESULTS: A total of 1496 kidney transplants were analyzed; 73% were from deceased donors and 27% from living donors. At least 1 surgical complication occurred in 352 patients (24%). Male gender (odds ratio [OR] = 1.35, 95% CI: 1.04-1.74), donor's age (OR = 1.14, 95% CI: 1.06-1.24 per decade increment), and third or fourth vs. first or second transplant in a recipient (OR = 2.90, 95% CI: 1.02-8.24) were significantly associated with surgical complications. The surgeon's transplant experience was not found to be associated with surgical complications. Even surgeons with an experience of less than 10 kidney transplants did not have higher complication rates, 30-day mortality, or 1-year graft survival. Individual surgeons' complication rates analyzed by cumulative sum plots did not improve with increasing experience. CONCLUSIONS: We present the largest single-center study on surgical complications after kidney transplantation, with unique data on the surgeon's experience for every single procedure. We found no evidence for a learning curve during training for kidney transplantation. We conclude that carefully selected experienced general and vascular surgeons can achieve good results in kidney transplantation after a relatively short training period.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether surgical complications after kidney transplantation correlate with surgeon's experience and whether individual surgeons' complication rates improve during their learning process. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis: A generalized linear mixed-effects model was used to identify risk factors for surgical complications. Plots of cumulative sums of complications were used to evaluate the individual surgeons' performance. SETTING: Single-center experience of a teaching hospital in Switzerland. PARTICIPANTS: Consecutive kidney transplant recipients operated from 1962 until 2003. RESULTS: A total of 1496 kidney transplants were analyzed; 73% were from deceased donors and 27% from living donors. At least 1 surgical complication occurred in 352 patients (24%). Male gender (odds ratio [OR] = 1.35, 95% CI: 1.04-1.74), donor's age (OR = 1.14, 95% CI: 1.06-1.24 per decade increment), and third or fourth vs. first or second transplant in a recipient (OR = 2.90, 95% CI: 1.02-8.24) were significantly associated with surgical complications. The surgeon's transplant experience was not found to be associated with surgical complications. Even surgeons with an experience of less than 10 kidney transplants did not have higher complication rates, 30-day mortality, or 1-year graft survival. Individual surgeons' complication rates analyzed by cumulative sum plots did not improve with increasing experience. CONCLUSIONS: We present the largest single-center study on surgical complications after kidney transplantation, with unique data on the surgeon's experience for every single procedure. We found no evidence for a learning curve during training for kidney transplantation. We conclude that carefully selected experienced general and vascular surgeons can achieve good results in kidney transplantation after a relatively short training period.
Authors: Jackson Tan; Muhammad Abdul Mabood Khalil; Dalinatul Ahmed; Jayakrishnan Pisharam; Chiao Yuen Lim; Hock Beng Chua; William Chong; Kim Khee Tan Journal: J Transplant Date: 2021-04-20