Literature DB >> 8196141

The effect of transplant center volume on cardiac transplant outcome. A report of the United Network for Organ Sharing Scientific Registry.

J D Hosenpud1, T J Breen, E B Edwards, O P Daily, L G Hunsicker.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The number of cardiac transplant programs continues to increase despite no increase in the number of hearts available for transplantation. As a result, the majority of heart transplant centers perform extremely small numbers of transplant operations annually. To determine the effect of small transplantation volume on transplant outcome, the following study was performed.
DESIGN: Using the Scientific Registry of the United Network for Organ Sharing, all cardiac transplant procedures from October 1987 through December 1991 were analyzed to determine whether center volumes affected cardiac transplant outcome. Patient survival rates for each center were determined, and the survival rates were modeled for the following patient variables: first transplantation or retransplantation, patient condition at the time of transplantation, patient underlying cardiac disease (congenital vs all others), and time.
SETTING: All cardiac transplant centers in the United States were included in the analysis. PATIENTS: All patients undergoing cardiac transplantation in the United States from October 1987 through December 1991 were included in the analysis. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The primary end point in this analysis was mortality.
RESULTS: Throughout the entire study, of the 150 cardiac transplant centers, 35.3% of the centers were performing fewer than five cardiac transplantations per year, 53.3% were performing fewer than nine transplantations per year, and 61.3% were performing fewer than 12 transplantations per year, the minimum required for Medicare payment eligibility. Using the modeled survival rates, the risk of mortality decreased to a basal level in those centers performing between eight and 10 transplant operations per year. In centers performing fewer than nine transplantations, mortality increased sharply and exponentially. Dividing centers into those that performed nine or more transplantations per year (70 centers) and fewer than nine transplantations per year (80 centers), the increased risk of mortality at 1 month and 12 months was 40.3% and 33.1%, respectively, in centers performing fewer than nine cardiac transplantations per year (P < .001). Once the threshold of nine transplant procedures was met, those centers that were eligible for Medicare payment did not have significantly better survival than those centers not eligible for Medicare coverage.
CONCLUSIONS: These data demonstrate that the risk of mortality at early and intermediate time points is substantially higher in low-volume cardiac transplant centers, which make up more than half of the centers performing cardiac transplantation in the United States.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 8196141

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA        ISSN: 0098-7484            Impact factor:   56.272


  17 in total

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Authors:  Mario C Deng
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2.  Temporal trends in liver transplant centre volume in the USA.

Authors:  Elisabeth T Tracy; Kyla M Bennett; Emeline M Aviki; Theodore N Pappas; Bradley H Collins; Janet E Tuttle-Newhall; Carlos E Marroquin; Paul C Kuo; John E Scarborough
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3.  The effect of hospital volume on the in-hospital complication rate in knee replacement patients.

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Authors:  Feras Bader; Bassam Atallah; John Rizk; Waleed AlHabeeb
Journal:  Transplantation       Date:  2018-07       Impact factor: 4.939

Review 5.  Ethical issues in access, listing and regulation of pediatric heart transplantation.

Authors:  David W Bearl
Journal:  Transl Pediatr       Date:  2019-10

6.  Institutional volume of heart transplantation with left ventricular assist device explantation influences graft survival.

Authors:  Nicholas A Haglund; Irene D Feurer; Rashid M Ahmad; Thomas G DiSalvo; Daniel J Lenihan; Mary E Keebler; Kelly H Schlendorf; John M Stulak; Mark A Wigger; Simon Maltais
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7.  Persistent racial disparities in survival after heart transplantation.

Authors:  Vincent Liu; Jay Bhattacharya; David Weill; Mark A Hlatky
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Journal:  Intensive Care Med       Date:  2003-12-19       Impact factor: 17.440

9.  Poor outcomes for children on the wait list at low-volume kidney transplant centers in the United States.

Authors:  Abbas Rana; Eileen D Brewer; Brandi B Scully; Michael L Kueht; Matt Goss; Karim J Halazun; Hao Liu; N Thao N Galvan; Ronald T Cotton; Christine A O'Mahony
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  2016-10-18       Impact factor: 3.714

10.  Variation in outcomes across centers after surgery for lumbar stenosis and degenerative spondylolisthesis in the spine patient outcomes research trial.

Authors:  Atman Desai; Kimon Bekelis; Perry A Ball; Jon Lurie; Sohail K Mirza; Tor D Tosteson; Wenyan Zhao; James N Weinstein
Journal:  Spine (Phila Pa 1976)       Date:  2013-04-15       Impact factor: 3.468

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