Evaluation of Failure to Rescue as a Quality Metric in Pediatric Heart Surgery: An Analysis of The STS Congenital Heart Surgery Database

Background Failure to rescue (FTR; the probability of death after a complication) has been adopted as a quality metric in adult cardiac surgery, in which it has been shown that high-performing centers with low mortality rates do not have fewer complications, but rather lower mortality in those who e...

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Published inThe Annals of thoracic surgery Vol. 94; no. 2; pp. 573 - 580
Main Authors Pasquali, Sara K., MD, MHS, He, Xia, MS, Jacobs, Jeffrey P., MD, Jacobs, Marshall L., MD, O'Brien, Sean M., PhD, Gaynor, J. William, MD
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York, NY Elsevier Inc 01.08.2012
Elsevier
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Summary:Background Failure to rescue (FTR; the probability of death after a complication) has been adopted as a quality metric in adult cardiac surgery, in which it has been shown that high-performing centers with low mortality rates do not have fewer complications, but rather lower mortality in those who experience a complication (lower FTR). It is unknown whether this holds true in pediatric heart surgery. We characterized the relationship between complications, FTR, and mortality in this population. Methods Children (0 to 18 years) undergoing heart surgery at centers participating in the Society of Thoracic Surgeons Congenital Heart Surgery Database (2006 to 2009) were included. Outcomes were examined in multivariable analysis adjusting for patient characteristics, surgical risk category, and within-center clustering. Results This study included 40,930 patients from 72 centers. Overall in-hospital mortality was 3.7%, 39.3% had a postoperative complication, and the FTR rate (number of deaths in those with a complication) was 9.1%. When hospitals were characterized by in-hospital mortality rate, there was no difference across hospital mortality tertiles in the complication rate in adjusted analysis; however, hospitals in the lowest mortality tertile had significantly lower FTR rates (6.6% versus 12.4%; p < 0.0001). Similar results were seen when evaluating high-severity complications and across surgical risk groups. Conclusions This analysis suggests that hospitals with low mortality rates do not have fewer complications after pediatric heart surgery, but instead have lower mortality in those who experience a complication (lower FTR). Further investigation into FTR as a quality metric in pediatric heart surgery is warranted.
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ISSN:0003-4975
1552-6259
DOI:10.1016/j.athoracsur.2012.03.065