The impact of team familiarity on intra and postoperative cardiac surgical outcomes

Citation:

Michael R Mathis, Steven Yule, Xiaoting Wu, Roger D Dias, Allison M Janda, Sarah L Krein, Milisa Manojlovich, Matthew D Caldwell, Korana Stakich-Alpirez, Min Zhang, Jason Corso, Nathan Louis, Tongbo Xu, Jeremy Wolverton, Francis D Pagani, and Donald S Likosky. 2021. “The impact of team familiarity on intra and postoperative cardiac surgical outcomes.” Surgery, 170, 4, Pp. 1031-1038.

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Familiarity among cardiac surgery team members may be an important contributor to better outcomes and thus serve as a target for enhancing outcomes. METHODS: Adult cardiac surgical procedures (n = 4,445) involving intraoperative providers were evaluated at a tertiary hospital between 2016 and 2020. Team familiarity (mean of prior cardiac surgeries performed by participating surgeon/nonsurgeon pairs within 2 years before the operation) were regressed on cardiopulmonary bypass duration (primary-an intraoperative measure of care efficiency) and postoperative complication outcomes (major morbidity, mortality), adjusting for provider experience, surgeon 2-year case volume before the surgery, case start time, weekday, and perioperative risk factors. The relationship between team familiarity and outcomes was assessed across predicted risk strata. RESULTS: Median (interquartile range) cardiopulmonary bypass duration was 132 (91-192) minutes, and 698 (15.7%) patients developed major postoperative morbidity. The relationship between team familiarity and cardiopulmonary bypass duration significantly differed across predicted risk strata (P = .0001). High (relative to low) team familiarity was associated with reduced cardiopulmonary bypass duration for medium-risk (-24 minutes) and high-risk (-27 minutes) patients. Increasing team familiarity was not significantly associated with the odds of major morbidity and mortality. CONCLUSION: Team familiarity, which was predictive of improved intraoperative efficiency without compromising major postoperative outcomes, may serve as a novel quality improvement target in the setting of cardiac surgery.

Last updated on 04/19/2022