| Literature DB >> 31467054 |
Tim Jones1,2, Andrew J Carr3, David Beard3, Myles-Jay Linton4,2, Leila Rooshenas2, Jenny Donovan4,2, William Hollingworth4,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To illustrate the need for better evaluation of surgical procedures, we investigated the use and cost of subacromial decompression in England over the last decade compared with other countries and explored how this related to the conduct and outcomes of randomised, placebo-controlled clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: England; Subacromial decompression; arthroscopy; commissioning; shoulder surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31467054 PMCID: PMC6719759 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-030229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1ICD-10 and OPCS-4 codes used to define subacromial decompression.13 ICD-10, International Classification of Diseases - version 10;OPCS-4, Office of Population, Censuses and Surveys- fourth revision.
Figure 2Directly standardised rates (per 100 000 people) of subacromial decompression in England; Finland; New York State, USA; Florida State, USA and Western Australia notes for figure 2. England data prior to 2007 is taken from Judge et al.13; New York State data is for subacromial decompression with or without rotator cuff repair, while data for Florida State, Finland and Western Australia is for subacromial decompression alone.37–40
Descriptive information for subacromial decompression patients, 2007/2008 and 2016/2017
| 2007/08 | 2016/17 | |
| Procedure count | 15 112 | 28 802 |
| % Women | 51.0 | 52.0 |
| Age in years (SD) | 54.94 (12.55) | 54.89 (12.39) |
| % Arthroscopy | 39.0 | 94.1 |
| % Independent providers | 2.4 | 31.9 |
| % Day-case | 51.0 | 79.3 |
Figure 3Indirectly standardised rates of subacromial decompression by clinicalcommissioning group in England, 2016/2017.
90th/10th percentile ratios for directly age-sex standardised rates of subacromial decompression by clinicalcommissioning group, England, 2007/2008 to 2016/2017
| Year | 90th percentile | 10th percentile | 90th/10th ratio (95% CI*) |
| 2007/08 | 53 | 15 | 3.6 (2.2 to 6.1) |
| 2008/09 | 55 | 16 | 3.3 (2.1 to 5.2) |
| 2009/10 | 72 | 27 | 2.6 (2.0 to 3.5) |
| 2010/11 | 87 | 33 | 2.6 (1.9 to 3.6) |
| 2011/12 | 89 | 36 | 2.5 (2.0 to 3.1) |
| 2012/13 | 90 | 33 | 2.7 (2.0 to 3.7) |
| 2013/14 | 88 | 34 | 2.6 (2.1 to 3.3) |
| 2014/15 | 89 | 33 | 2.7 (2.0 to 3.7) |
| 2015/16 | 81 | 33 | 2.5 (1.4 to 4.3) |
| 2016/17 | 83 | 30 | 2.7 (2.2 to 3.4) |
*Confidence intervals for rate ratios.61
International comparisons of age-sex-standardised rates of subacromial decompression
| Article | Country | Data year | SAD rate (per 100 000 population) |
| Thorpe | Western Australia | 2013 | ~115 |
| Paloneva | Finland | 2011 | 131 |
| Vitale | New York State | 2006 | 102 |
| Iyengar | Florida State | 2007 | ~130 |
| Our Data | England | 2016/17 | 52 |
Numbers for Thorpe et al and Iyengar et al 38 were estimated from a graph; New York State data is for subacromial decompression with/without rotator cuff repair.
SAD, subacromial decompression.37–40