einstein (São Paulo). 26/Nov/2020;18:eAO5628.

Mortality after radical cystectomy is strongly related to the institution’s volume of surgeries

Fernando Korkes ORCID logo , Frederico Timóteo Silva Cunha ORCID logo , Matheus Prado Nascimento ORCID logo , Antonio Flávio Silva Rodrigues ORCID logo , Willy Baccaglini ORCID logo , Sidney Glina ORCID logo

DOI: 10.31744/einstein_journal/2020AO5628

ABSTRACT

Objective:

To analyze mortality rates and hospitalization data after radical cystectomy in each public healthcare center in São Paulo in the last decade, considering the number of surgeries performed at each center.

Methods:

This study included patients from the Departamento de Informática do Sistema Único de Saúde from the state of São Paulo, who underwent radical cystectomy between 2008 and 2018. Data analyzed included organization name, number of procedures/year, in-hospital death rates and hospital length of stay.

Results:

A total of 1,377 radical cystectomies were registered in the public health system in São Paulo, between 2008-2018. A total of 91 institutions performed at least one radical cystectomy in the decade analyzed. The number of radical cystectomies performed per organization during the years analyzed ranged from one to 161. Only 45.6% of patients were operated in organizations that performed more than five radical cystectomies yearly. A total of 684 patients were operated in organizations with higher surgical volume. There were 117 in-hospital deaths, representing an 8.5% mortality rate for the state of São Paulo during the last decade. Whereas highest volume organizations (>6 radical cystectomies/year) had a mortality rate of 6.1%, the lowest volume (<1 radical cystectomy /year) had a 17.5% in-hospital mortality rate.

Conclusion:

There was a strong relation between organization volume of radical cystectomy and in-hospital mortality rate after radical cystectomy in São Paulo from 2008-2018. Unfortunately, we could not observe a trend toward centralization of such complex procedures, as it has occurred in developed countries during the last decades.

Mortality after radical cystectomy is strongly related to the institution’s volume of surgeries