Nick Lansdale1, Nadeem Al-Khafaji2, Patrick Green3, Simon E Kenny3. 1. Alder Hey Children's Hospital, Liverpool, UK. Electronic address: nick.lansdale@alderhey.nhs.uk. 2. University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK. 3. Alder Hey Children's Hospital, Liverpool, UK.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Determine national outcomes for pyloromyotomy; how these are affected by: (i) surgical approach (open/laparoscopic), or (ii) centre type/volume and establish potential benchmarks of quality. METHODS: Hospital Episode Statistics data were analysed for admissions 2002-2011. Data presented as median (IQR). RESULTS: 9686 infants underwent pyloromyotomy (83% male). Surgery was performed in 22 specialist (SpCen) and 39 nonspecialist centres (NonSpCen). The proportion treated in SpCen increased linearly by 0.4%/year (r=0.76, p=0.01). Annual case volume in SpCen vs. NonSpCen was 40 (24-53) vs. 1 (0-3). Time to surgery was shorter in SpCen (1day [1, 2] vs. 2 [1-3]), but total stay equal (4days [3-6]). 137 (1.4%) had complications requiring reoperation (wound problem 0.6%; repeat pyloromyotomy 0.5% and perforation, bleeding or obstruction 0.2%): pooled rates were similar between SpCen and NonSpCen (1.4% vs. 1.6%, p=0.52). Three NonSpCen had >5% reoperations (within 99.8% C.I. as small denominators). There was no relationship between reoperation and centre volume. Laparoscopic pyloromyotomy had increased risk of repeat pyloromyotomy (OR 2.28 [1.14-4.57], p=0.029). CONCLUSIONS: Pyloric stenosis surgery shifted from centres local to patients, but outcomes were unaffected by centre type/volume. Modest reported benefits of laparoscopy appear offset by increased reoperations. Quality benchmarks could be set for reoperation <4%. TYPE OF STUDY: Treatment Study. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III.
OBJECTIVES: Determine national outcomes for pyloromyotomy; how these are affected by: (i) surgical approach (open/laparoscopic), or (ii) centre type/volume and establish potential benchmarks of quality. METHODS: Hospital Episode Statistics data were analysed for admissions 2002-2011. Data presented as median (IQR). RESULTS: 9686 infants underwent pyloromyotomy (83% male). Surgery was performed in 22 specialist (SpCen) and 39 nonspecialist centres (NonSpCen). The proportion treated in SpCen increased linearly by 0.4%/year (r=0.76, p=0.01). Annual case volume in SpCen vs. NonSpCen was 40 (24-53) vs. 1 (0-3). Time to surgery was shorter in SpCen (1day [1, 2] vs. 2 [1-3]), but total stay equal (4days [3-6]). 137 (1.4%) had complications requiring reoperation (wound problem 0.6%; repeat pyloromyotomy 0.5% and perforation, bleeding or obstruction 0.2%): pooled rates were similar between SpCen and NonSpCen (1.4% vs. 1.6%, p=0.52). Three NonSpCen had >5% reoperations (within 99.8% C.I. as small denominators). There was no relationship between reoperation and centre volume. Laparoscopic pyloromyotomy had increased risk of repeat pyloromyotomy (OR 2.28 [1.14-4.57], p=0.029). CONCLUSIONS: Pyloric stenosis surgery shifted from centres local to patients, but outcomes were unaffected by centre type/volume. Modest reported benefits of laparoscopy appear offset by increased reoperations. Quality benchmarks could be set for reoperation <4%. TYPE OF STUDY: Treatment Study. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III.