Does time of surgery influence the rate of false-negative appendectomies? A retrospective observational study of 274 patients

Abstract Background Multiple disciplines have described an “after-hours effect” relating to worsened mortality and morbidity outside regular working hours. This retrospective observational study aimed to evaluate whether diagnostic accuracy of a common surgical condition worsened after regular hours...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kirit Singh, Michael S. J. Wilson, Maria Coats
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-12-01
Series:Patient Safety in Surgery
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13037-018-0180-2
id doaj-c6bb45b41b4e4eeb983ef11213b14c85
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c6bb45b41b4e4eeb983ef11213b14c852020-11-25T01:20:44ZengBMCPatient Safety in Surgery1754-94932018-12-011211610.1186/s13037-018-0180-2Does time of surgery influence the rate of false-negative appendectomies? A retrospective observational study of 274 patientsKirit Singh0Michael S. J. Wilson1Maria Coats2Department of General Surgery, Ninewells Hospital, NHS TaysideDepartment of General Surgery, Ninewells Hospital, NHS TaysideDepartment of General Surgery, Ninewells Hospital, NHS TaysideAbstract Background Multiple disciplines have described an “after-hours effect” relating to worsened mortality and morbidity outside regular working hours. This retrospective observational study aimed to evaluate whether diagnostic accuracy of a common surgical condition worsened after regular hours. Methods Electronic operative records for all non-infant patients (age > 4 years) operated on at a single centre for presumed acute appendicitis were retrospectively reviewed over a 56-month period (06/17/2012–02/01/2017). The primary outcome measure of unknown diagnosis was compared between those performed in regular hours (08:00–17:00) or off hours (17:01–07:59). Pre-clinical biochemistry and pre-morbid status were recorded to determine case heterogeneity between the two groups, along with secondary outcomes of length of stay and complication rate. Results Out of 289 procedures, 274 cases were deemed eligible for inclusion. Of the 133 performed in regular hours, 79% were appendicitis, compared to 74% of the 141 procedures performed off hours. The percentage of patients with an unknown diagnosis was 6% in regular hours compared to 15% off hours (RR 2.48; 95% CI 1.14–5.39). This was accompanied by increased numbers of registrars (residents in training) leading procedures off hours (37% compared to 24% in regular hours). Pre-morbid status, biochemistry, length of stay and post-operative complication rate showed no significant difference. Conclusions This retrospective study suggests that the rate of unknown diagnoses for acute appendicitis increases overnight, potentially reflecting increased numbers of unnecessary procedures being performed off hours due to poorer diagnostic accuracy. Reduced levels of staffing, availability of diagnostic modalities and changes to workforce training may explain this, but further prospective work is required. Potential solutions may include protocolizing the management of common acute surgical conditions and making more use of non-resident on call senior colleagues.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13037-018-0180-2Negative appendectomyOut of hoursAfter hoursOff hoursDiagnostic accuracy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kirit Singh
Michael S. J. Wilson
Maria Coats
spellingShingle Kirit Singh
Michael S. J. Wilson
Maria Coats
Does time of surgery influence the rate of false-negative appendectomies? A retrospective observational study of 274 patients
Patient Safety in Surgery
Negative appendectomy
Out of hours
After hours
Off hours
Diagnostic accuracy
author_facet Kirit Singh
Michael S. J. Wilson
Maria Coats
author_sort Kirit Singh
title Does time of surgery influence the rate of false-negative appendectomies? A retrospective observational study of 274 patients
title_short Does time of surgery influence the rate of false-negative appendectomies? A retrospective observational study of 274 patients
title_full Does time of surgery influence the rate of false-negative appendectomies? A retrospective observational study of 274 patients
title_fullStr Does time of surgery influence the rate of false-negative appendectomies? A retrospective observational study of 274 patients
title_full_unstemmed Does time of surgery influence the rate of false-negative appendectomies? A retrospective observational study of 274 patients
title_sort does time of surgery influence the rate of false-negative appendectomies? a retrospective observational study of 274 patients
publisher BMC
series Patient Safety in Surgery
issn 1754-9493
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract Background Multiple disciplines have described an “after-hours effect” relating to worsened mortality and morbidity outside regular working hours. This retrospective observational study aimed to evaluate whether diagnostic accuracy of a common surgical condition worsened after regular hours. Methods Electronic operative records for all non-infant patients (age > 4 years) operated on at a single centre for presumed acute appendicitis were retrospectively reviewed over a 56-month period (06/17/2012–02/01/2017). The primary outcome measure of unknown diagnosis was compared between those performed in regular hours (08:00–17:00) or off hours (17:01–07:59). Pre-clinical biochemistry and pre-morbid status were recorded to determine case heterogeneity between the two groups, along with secondary outcomes of length of stay and complication rate. Results Out of 289 procedures, 274 cases were deemed eligible for inclusion. Of the 133 performed in regular hours, 79% were appendicitis, compared to 74% of the 141 procedures performed off hours. The percentage of patients with an unknown diagnosis was 6% in regular hours compared to 15% off hours (RR 2.48; 95% CI 1.14–5.39). This was accompanied by increased numbers of registrars (residents in training) leading procedures off hours (37% compared to 24% in regular hours). Pre-morbid status, biochemistry, length of stay and post-operative complication rate showed no significant difference. Conclusions This retrospective study suggests that the rate of unknown diagnoses for acute appendicitis increases overnight, potentially reflecting increased numbers of unnecessary procedures being performed off hours due to poorer diagnostic accuracy. Reduced levels of staffing, availability of diagnostic modalities and changes to workforce training may explain this, but further prospective work is required. Potential solutions may include protocolizing the management of common acute surgical conditions and making more use of non-resident on call senior colleagues.
topic Negative appendectomy
Out of hours
After hours
Off hours
Diagnostic accuracy
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13037-018-0180-2
work_keys_str_mv AT kiritsingh doestimeofsurgeryinfluencetherateoffalsenegativeappendectomiesaretrospectiveobservationalstudyof274patients
AT michaelsjwilson doestimeofsurgeryinfluencetherateoffalsenegativeappendectomiesaretrospectiveobservationalstudyof274patients
AT mariacoats doestimeofsurgeryinfluencetherateoffalsenegativeappendectomiesaretrospectiveobservationalstudyof274patients
_version_ 1725132331315888128