Abstract
Objective: We evaluated whether volume-based, rather than time-based, annual reporting of center outcomes for coronary artery bypass grafting may improve inference of quality, assuming that large center-level year-to-year outcome variability is related to statistical noise. Methods: We analyzed 2012 to 2016 data on isolated coronary artery bypass grafting using statewide outcome reports from New York and California. Annual changes in center-level observed-to-expected mortality ratio represented stability of year-to-year outcomes. Cubic spline fit related the annual observed-to-expected ratio change and center volume. Volume above the inflection point of the spline curve indicated centers with low year-to-year change in outcome. We compared observed-to-expected ratio changes between centers below and above the volume threshold and observed-to-expected ratio changes between consecutive annual and biennial measurements. Results: There were 155 centers with median annual volume of 89 (interquartile range, 55-160) for isolated coronary artery bypass grafting. The inflection point of observed-to-expected ratio variability was observed at 111 cases/year. Median year-to-year observed-to-expected ratio change for centers performing less than 111 cases (62 centers) was greater at 0.83 (0.26-1.59) compared with centers performing 111 cases or more (93 centers) at 0.49 (022-0.87) (P
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Mori, M., Weininger, G. A., Shang, M., Brooks, C., Mullan, C. W., Najem, M., … Geirsson, A. (2021). Association between coronary artery bypass graft center volume and year-to-year outcome variability: New York and California statewide analysis. In Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery (Vol. 161, pp. 1035-1041.e1). Mosby Inc. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtcvs.2020.07.119
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