Incidence of Liver Resection Following the Introduction of Caseload Requirements for Liver Surgery in Switzerland

World J Surg. 2022 Jun;46(6):1457-1464. doi: 10.1007/s00268-022-06509-w. Epub 2022 Mar 16.

Abstract

Background: Centralization of care is an established concept in complex visceral surgery. Switzerland introduced case load requirements (CR) in 2013 in five areas of cancer surgery. The current study investigates the effects of CR on indication and mortality in liver surgery.

Methods: This is a retrospective analysis of a complete national in-hospital data set including all admissions between January 1, 2005, and December 31, 2015. Primary outcome variables were the incidence proportion and the 60-day in-hospital mortality of liver resections. Incidence proportion was calculated as the overall yearly number of liver resections performed in relation to the population living in Switzerland before and after the introduction of CR.

Results: Our analysis shows an increase number of liver resections compared to the period before introduction of CR from 2005-2012 (4.67 resections/100,000) to 2013-2015 (5.32 resections/100,000) after CR introduction. Age-adjusted incidence proportion increased by 14% (OR 1.14 95 CI [1.07-1.22]). National in-hospital mortality remained stable before and after CR (4.1 vs 3.7%), but increased in high-volume institutions (3.6 vs 5.6%). The number of hospitals performing liver resections decreased after the introduction of CR from 86 to 43. Half of the resections were performed in institutions reaching the stipulated numbers (53% before vs 49% after introduction of CR). After implementation of CR, patients undergoing liver surgery had more comorbidities (88 vs 92%).

Conclusion: The introduction of CR for liver surgery in Switzerland in 2013 was accompanied by an increase in operative volume with limited effects on centralization of care.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Hospitals, High-Volume*
  • Humans
  • Incidence
  • Liver*
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Switzerland / epidemiology