Towards standardized measurement of adverse events in spine surgery: conceptual model and pilot evaluation

被引:113
作者
Mirza, Sohail K. [1 ]
Deyo, Richard A.
Heagerty, Patrick J.
Turner, Judith A.
Lee, Lorri A.
Goodkin, Robert
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Ctr Cost & Outcomes Res, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Dept Orthopaed & Sports Med, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[3] Univ Washington, Dept Neurol Surg, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[4] Univ Washington, Dept Med, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[5] Univ Washington, Dept Hlth Serv, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[6] Univ Washington, Dept Biostat, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[7] Univ Washington, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[8] Univ Washington, Dept Rehabil Med, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[9] Univ Washington, Dept Anesthesiol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1186/1471-2474-7-53
中图分类号
R826.8 [整形外科学]; R782.2 [口腔颌面部整形外科学]; R726.2 [小儿整形外科学]; R62 [整形外科学(修复外科学)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Independent of efficacy, information on safety of surgical procedures is essential for informed choices. We seek to develop standardized methodology for describing the safety of spinal operations and apply these methods to study lumbar surgery. We present a conceptual model for evaluating the safety of spine surgery and describe development of tools to measure principal components of this model: ( 1) specifying outcome by explicit criteria for adverse event definition, mode of ascertainment, cause, severity, or preventability, and ( 2) quantitatively measuring predictors such as patient factors, comorbidity, severity of degenerative spine disease, and invasiveness of spine surgery. Methods: We created operational definitions for 176 adverse occurrences and established multiple mechanisms for reporting them. We developed new methods to quantify the severity of adverse occurrences, degeneration of lumbar spine, and invasiveness of spinal procedures. Using kappa statistics and intra-class correlation coefficients, we assessed agreement for the following: four reviewers independently coding etiology, preventability, and severity for 141 adverse occurrences, two observers coding lumbar spine degenerative changes in 10 selected cases, and two researchers coding invasiveness of surgery for 50 initial cases. Results: During the first six months of prospective surveillance, rigorous daily medical record reviews identified 92.6% of the adverse occurrences we recorded, and voluntary reports by providers identified 38.5% ( surgeons reported 18.3%, inpatient rounding team reported 23.1%, and conferences discussed 6.1%). Trained observers had fair agreement in classifying etiology of 141 adverse occurrences into 18 categories ( kappa = 0.35), but agreement was substantial ( kappa >= 0.61) for 4 specific categories: technical error, failure in communication, systems failure, and no error. Preventability assessment had moderate agreement ( mean weighted kappa = 0.44). Adverse occurrence severity rating had fair agreement ( mean weighted kappa = 0.33) when using a scale based on the JCAHO Sentinel Event Policy, but agreement was substantial for severity ratings on a new 11-point numerical severity scale (ICC = 0.74). There was excellent interrater agreement for a lumbar degenerative disease severity score ( ICC = 0.98) and an index of surgery invasiveness ( ICC = 0.99). Conclusion: Composite measures of disease severity and surgery invasiveness may allow development of risk-adjusted predictive models for adverse events in spine surgery. Standard measures of adverse events and risk adjustment may also facilitate post-marketing surveillance of spinal devices, effectiveness research, and quality improvement.
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页数:16
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