Don’t judge a surgeon by his
or her ageNewswise —
Researchers at the University of Michigan Health System say patients
should be less concerned about the age of their surgeon and more
focused on other factors the really count – like surgical volume –
when choosing a surgeon.
These findings, published in the
September issue of the Annals of Surgery, reveal that for some
complex cardiovascular and cancer surgical procedures, surgeons
older than 60 with low surgical volumes had higher patient mortality
rates than their younger counterparts. However, older surgeons who
continued to maintain higher surgical case loads were found to have
comparable outcomes to peers ages 41 to 50.
The study also dispels the
belief that younger, less experienced surgeons are more
likely to have poor surgical outcomes. Instead, the
researchers say young surgeons, ages 40 and under, had
similar patient mortality rates to those of their more
experienced peers for the eight surgical procedures studied.
“This study’s results
should be very encouraging not only for patients, but also
for younger and older surgeons whose operative skills may
previously have been the subject of scrutiny,” says lead
author Jennifer F. Waljee, M.D., M.P.H., general surgery
resident in the Department of Surgery at the U-M Medical
School. “The bottom line is that for most procedures the age
of the surgeon is not an important predictor of operative
risk for a patient. The effect of surgeon age was largely
limited to those surgeons with lower procedure volumes.”
Previous studies that
focused on primary care have suggested an inverse
relationship between a surgeon’s age and his or her clinical
performance. They’ve found that older physicians are less
likely to know about new treatments and medications, and
tend to perform poorly on recertification exams.
Based on these recent studies,
Waljee and her colleagues wondered if some of the common mental and
physical affects of aging might affect older surgeons’ performance
in the operating room, as well.
Using data from the National
Medicare Inpatient Files, the team reviewed eight major
cardiovascular procedures and cancer surgical resections that were
performed from 1998 to 1999 on patients between the ages 65 to 99.
For the study, surgeons were
placed into three age groups: 40 years and younger, ages 41-50, and
60 years and older.
A total of 460,738 Medicare
patients who underwent one of the eight surgical procedures –
coronary artery bypass grafting; elective abdominal aortic aneurysm
repair, aortic valve replacement, carotid endarterectomy,
pancreatectomy, esophagectomy, lung resection and cystectomy – were
used for this study. These procedures were chosen because they are
some of the more commonly-performed procedures among Medicare
patients, says Waljee.
Patient operative mortality –
death before discharge or within 30 days of surgery – was reviewed
for each patient. Additionally, factors such as surgeon procedure
volume, hospital surgery volume and the hospital’s teaching status
were evaluated.
Overall, surgeons over age 60 were
found to have higher patient mortality rates when compared against
the rates of surgeons ages 41-50, for three of the eight procedures:
pancreatectomy, coronary artery bypass grafting, and carotid
endarterectomy. Surgeon age was not related to mortality for
elective abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, aortic valve replacement,
exophagectomy, lung resection or cystectomy.
More surprising to researchers,
however, was that the younger surgeons – those under age 40 – had
comparable mortality to surgeons between the ages of 41 and 50, for
all eight procedures.
“We expected to see a significant
difference in patient mortality at the extremes of surgeon age, but
instead found very little variation among younger and older
surgeons,” says Waljee, a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar.
“Based on these finding, we’d encourage patients not to focus on age
when selecting a surgeon. Instead, other characteristics of the
provider and practice setting, such as operative volume, are likely
better predictors of patient outcome than surgeon age.”
Waljee hopes to further explore
this topic through future research to determine if specific
mechanisms of aging (physical and mental stamina, vision and motor
skills) affect low-volume surgeons’ performance in the OR.
Along with Waljee, co-authors from
the U-M Department of Surgery’s Michigan Surgical Collaborative for
Outcomes Research and Evaluation (M-SCORE) are Lazar J. Greenfield,
M.D.; Justin B. Dimick, M.D., M.P.H.; and John D. Birkmeyer, M.D.
The study was funded by the U-M
Health System.