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Journal article

Multicentre observational study of surgical system failures in aortic procedures and their effect on patient outcomes

Abstract:

Background

Vascular surgical care has changed dramatically in recent years with little knowledge of the impact of system failures on patient safety. The primary aim of this multicentre observational study was to define the landscape of surgical system failures, errors and inefficiency (collectively termed failures) in aortic surgery. Secondary aims were to investigate determinants of these failures and their relationship with patient outcomes.


Methods

Twenty vascular teams at ten English hospitals trained in structured self‐reporting of intraoperative failures (phase I). Failures occurring in open and endovascular aortic procedures were reported in phase II. Failure details (category, delay, consequence), demographic information (patient, procedure, team experience) and outcomes were reported.

Results

There were strong correlations between the trainer and teams for the number and type of failures recorded during 88 procedures in phase I. In 185 aortic procedures, teams reported a median of 3 (i.q.r. 2–6) failures per procedure. Most frequent failures related to equipment (unavailability, failure, configuration, desterilization). Most major failures related to communication. Fourteen failures directly harmed 12 patients. Significant predictors of an increased failure rate were: endovascular compared with open repair (incidence rate ratio (IRR) for open repair 0·71, 95 per cent c.i. 0·57 to 0·88; P = 0·002), thoracic aneurysms compared with other aortic pathologies (IRR 2·07, 1·39 to 3·08; P ≺ 0·001) and unfamiliarity with equipment (IRR 1·52, 1·20 to 1·91; P ≺ 0·001). The major failure total was associated with reoperation (P = 0·011), major complications (P = 0·029) and death (P = 0·027).


Conclusion

Failure in aortic procedures is frequently caused by issues with team‐working and equipment, and is associated with patient harm. Multidisciplinary team training, effective use of technology and new‐device accreditation may improve patient outcomes.

Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1002/bjs.10275

Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Experimental Psychology
Role:
Author


More from this funder
Grant:
Biomedical Research Centre , Imperial College


Publisher:
Wiley
Journal:
British Journal of Surgery More from this journal
Volume:
103
Issue:
11
Pages:
1467–1475
Publication date:
2016-08-25
Acceptance date:
2016-06-21
DOI:
EISSN:
1365-2168
ISSN:
0007-1323


Pubs id:
pubs:640653
UUID:
uuid:8158dc08-d489-4e19-b03d-5ded3b3350be
Local pid:
pubs:640653
Source identifiers:
640653
Deposit date:
2016-08-26

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