Risk of
surgery for Lung Cancer lower at Teaching
Hospitals
Newswise — Patients
cared for by hospitals with residents in
training have a 17 percent less chance of
dying after lung cancer surgery compared
with patients undergoing surgery at
non-teaching hospitals, according to results
of a Johns Hopkins study published in the
March issue of the Annals of Thoracic
Surgery.
“There’s a public
perception that teaching hospitals can be
dangerous places because of training issues,
and concerns are frequently voiced by
patients and echoed in the press regarding a
fear of physicians-in-training practicing on
them,” says the lead author of the paper,
Robert Meguid, M.D., a surgical resident at
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
“The data from our
study help refute these fears.”
The Johns Hopkins
investigators looked at data from 46,951
patients, ages 18 to 85, who underwent
surgery for lung cancer at hospitals across
the United States between 1998 and 2004.
Operations ranged from small lung-segment
removal to total lung removal.
The researchers tracked
discharges and deaths, and compared patient
outcomes at three different types of
hospitals - those with any type of physician
specialty training program, those with
general surgery training programs and those
with thoracic surgery training programs.
They took into account
factors such as age, gender and other
illnesses of each patient, and they also
took into consideration the number of each
of the different types of lung cancer
surgeries that each hospital performed.
“It has been well
studied and reported that for complex
procedures for high-risk patients, the more
surgeries a hospital performs; the more
likely the patient will survive the
operation and hospitalization.
"This
is the first study we know of which shows
that teaching hospitals are factors
associated with good patient outcome,
independent of volume,” says Meguid.
Lung cancer is the
leading cause of cancer death among both
males and females in the United States. In
2007, there were an estimated 213,380 new
cases of lung cancer in the United States
and 160,390 deaths related to the disease.
Management of lung
cancer has greatly improved over the past
several decades. As a result, an increasing
number of patients become eligible for lung
resection procedures every year.
“Considerable efforts
have been made to identify factors that may
improve the quality of surgical care and
associated outcomes for these high-risk
patients,” says Meguid.
“Surgery for lung
cancer at teaching hospitals may provide one
source of quality improvement.”
Additional researchers
in the study from the Department of Surgery,
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,
include Stephen Yang, M.D., chief of the
Division of Thoracic Surgery; Malcolm Brock,
M.D.; Benjamin Brooke, M.D., David Chang,
Ph.D., and Timothy Sherwood, M.D. Sherwood
has since left Johns Hopkins and is
currently at Mary Washington Hospital in
Fredericksburg, Va.