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Effects of a Clinical Pathway for video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) on
quality and cost of care
Matthias HM Schwarzbach1*, Ulrich Ronellenfitsch1*, Qian Wang1, Eric D Rössner1,
Christof Denz2, Stefan Post3, Peter Hohenberger1
*these authors contributed equally to the paper
1Department of Surgery, Division of Surgical Oncology and Thoracic Surgery, University
Medicine Mannheim, Germany
2Department of Anesthesiology, University Medicine Mannheim, Germany
3Department of Surgery, University Medicine Mannheim, Germany
Corresponding author:
Matthias HM Schwarzbach
Department of Surgery, Division of Surgical Oncology and Thoracic Surgery
University Medicine Mannheim
Theodor-Kutzer-Ufer 1-3
D-68135 Mannheim, Germany
Phone: +49-621-383-2227
Fax: +49-6221-805790
E-mail: matthias.schwarzbach@chir.ma.uni-heidelberg.de
Abstract and keywords
Purpose: To evaluate effects of a Clinical Pathway (CP) for video-assisted thoraco-
scopic surgery (VATS) on process quality, outcome quality, and hospital costs.
Methods: We implemented a CP for VATS and compared 34 patients treated with CP to
77 patients treated without CP. Indicators for process quality were: duration of catheter
placement, pain intensity, respiratory exercising and mobilization. Outcome quality was
measured through morbidity, mortality, re-operations, and re-admissions. Cost of hospi-
tal stay was calculated using an imputed daily rate.
Results: Foley catheters were removed significantly earlier after CP implementation. All
patients on CP were mobilised and received pulmonary exercising on the operation day.
Pain levels were low after CP implementation. Median hospital stay significantly reduced
by five days. Perioperative outcome quality remained unchanged. Costs significantly
diminished by 1510 Euro per stay.
Conclusions: CP implementation had positive effects on process quality. Specifically,
catheter management was improved and a good pain control achieved. Patients bene-
fited from shortened stay and were treated at lower cost. A clear effect on outcome qual-
ity was not found. CPs are a promising tool for quality improvement and cost contain-
ment in thoracic surgery.
Keywords: Clinical Pathway; quality of care; thoracoscopy/VATS; outcomes; health
economics
Introduction
Process and outcome quality determine patients’ benefits from a health care inter-
vention [1]. This is especially valid in surgery, where perioperative morbidity and mortal-
ity still constitute a non-negligible challenge for many procedures [2;3]. At the same time,
cost pressure has steadily increased over the last decades [4]. So called Clinical Path-
ways (CPs) are increasingly used with the aim of improving quality of care, effectiveness
of perioperative treatment, and cost management. They are structured longitudinal
treatment plans which include a multidisciplinary and non-hierarchical approach to
streamline patient care at an institutional level [5].
In thoracic surgery, only few studies are available evaluating CP usage in clinical
practice. Lobectomy, video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS), pneumothorax
treatment and lung transplantation have been studied [6-10]. However, of these studies
one has no comparison group [8] and three do not assess process quality with clinical
treatment parameters such as time of drainage removal [6-8]. Moreover, data are sparse
and stem mostly from the USA and Japan. The single available European study reports
exclusively on pneumothorax treatment with chest drainage and no surgery [9]. Since
CP effects must be assumed to be strongly setting-specific [11], there is a definite need
for more ample evidence from Europe covering all aspects of CP usage including effects
on process quality measured through treatment parameters.
For this reason, we prospectively evaluated the effects of an institutionally devel-
oped CP for patients undergoing video-assisted thoracoscopy (VATS) on process and
outcome quality and hospital costs. In the present analysis we focus on the implementa-
tion phase during the first six months of CP use.
2
Patients and methods
Inclusion criteria and patient populations
The intervention group (CP group) comprised all consecutive patients undergoing
VATS at our institution from April 2007 to October 2007, who were treated with a CP.
Patient data were gathered prospectively. In an intention-to-treat approach, all patients
were included in the quality analysis irrespective of deviations from the CP or complica-
tions occurring during the course of treatment. As there were no defined exclusion or
abortion criteria and thus treatment with the CP was continued even in case of devia-
tions from the pre-specified plan of treatment.
The comparison group (pre-pathway group) consisted of all consecutive patients
who had been treated before CP implementation in 2006/7. For this group, data was
compiled retrospectively from records. In the pre-pathway group, patients were treated
according to the judgment and decisions taken by the treating physicians. Although sev-
eral semi-formal standards had been existent for single elements of care such as e.g.
analgetic therapy, there was no formulated “guideline” covering the whole treatment
course which was to be followed.
In order to obtain unbiased cost data, only patients who had been directly admitted
to and discharged from the thoracic surgery ward and no patients admitted from or trans-
ferred to other departments were included in the cost analysis.
Patient characteristics of the two study groups are displayed in table 1. There are
no statistically significant differences in sex, age and American Society of Anesthesio-
logy (ASA) classification (www.asahq.org). The majority of patients in both groups un-
derwent VATS for diagnostic or therapeutical pulmonary wedge resection (pulmo-
nary/pleural mass or bullae resection). Fewer patients underwent VATS to receive tal-
cum pleurodesis for pleural effusion. Pleurodesis was significantly more common in the
CP group. The most common underlying diagnoses were malignancies in both groups.
The relative number of operations done for pneumothorax / bullous emphysema was
significantly higher in the pre-pathway group.
CP design, implementation and content
Based on various national and international treatment and nursing recommen-
dations as well as on available evidence from the literature and internal treatment regi-
mens (e.g. standardized pain medication) a detailed CP for VATS was designed. The
approach was primarily interdisciplinary involving medical staff, i.e. physicians and
3
nurses of all hierarchy levels and all participating disciplines (surgery, anesthesiology,
radiology, physiotherapy), and administrative units. After a literature research performed
by a designated physician in order to identify pertinent evidence on perioperative treat-
ment of patients undergoing VATS, a CP structure was proposed. Subsequently, it was
integrated with existing institutional nursing standards by the head nurse of the thoracic
surgery ward. The resulting draft was jointly modified and a final version of the CP was
agreed on in a meeting of representatives of all different groups involved in patient care.
After CP implementation, meetings were held to decide on pertinent issues and possible
reframing of the CP when a respective need was conceived by the project group. The
process of CP development and implementation is shown in figure 2.
The CP was designed for intersectoral application (outpatient and inpatient
management). The diagnostic workup (e.g. spirometry, CT scans or laboratory tests)
was scheduled for the preoperative and follow-up treatment algorithms were included for
the postoperative outpatient phase. Hospital admission was to take place one day before
surgery. For the perioperative inpatient phase, the CP implemented key elements of en-
hanced recovery schemes (standardized analgesia, early ambulation, early removal of
invasive catheters etc.) [12;13]. The CP foresaw extubation in the operation theatre and,
except for cases judged to be at high risk of postoperative complications by the treating
surgeon and anesthesiologist, no routine postoperative monitoring of patients at the ICU
/ intermediate care unit. Patients routinely received one chest suction drainage. The
drainage was to be removed upon draining less than 100 ml per 24 hrs. Foley catheters
were placed for the operation and foreseen to be removed as soon as the patient was
awake. Central venous lines and epidural analgesia catheters were reserved for selected
patients at high perioperative risk or where conversion thoracotomy was likely a priori,
and were scheduled for removal on postoperative day 3. Patients without epidural pain
catheter received a standardized pain medication of ibuprofen 400 mg BID, metamizol 1
g TID and oxycodon/naloxon 10/5 mg BID. Patients with epidural catheter received only
ibuprofen 400 mg BID in addition to the epidural medication (sufentanyl/ropivacain in
variable dosage adjusted to the pain level expressed by the patient). Normal food intake
was restituted immediately after surgery and iv lines were removed as soon as the pa-
tient was able to drink sufficiently. Discharge was planned for the fourth postoperative
day based on the minimum stay stipulated in the German DRG catalogue (http://www.g-
drg.de). CPs were designed as four-page paper-based documents containing all stipu-
lated treatment steps for the single pre- and postoperative days. They were kept with
patient’s daily protocols and thus always available at the bedside. The CP is depicted in
the electronic supplementary material.
4
Quality of care
Perioperative process quality was defined as the fulfillment of medical procedures
delivered to the patient as detailed in the CP. Specifically, it was measured by (a) the
number of days invasive catheters (Foley catheter, central venous line, epidural analge-
sia catheter and chest suction drain) remained in situ; (b) early postoperative mobiliza-
tion; and (c) pain levels on day 3 and the day of discharge as expressed by the patient
on a visual analogue scale with possible values from 0 (no pain) to 10 (maximum pain).
Perioperative outcome quality was defined as morbidity, 30-day mortality, readmission
and re-operation rate.
Cost calculation
Since at the time of analysis detailed cost data were not available for the CP
group, cost of hospital stay was computed based on the average daily cost for the 21
patients treated in 2006 meeting the above mentioned inclusion criteria. For these indi-
viduals, expenses from cost centers depending directly on length of stay (treatment on
the regular ward, optionally the ICU / intermediate care unit, radiological investigations
and laboratory testing) were extracted from the internal accounting system and divided
by the mean number of days these selected patients stayed in the facility, thus yielding
an average daily cost. Subsequently, this figure was multiplied with the number of days a
patient stayed in the hospital to obtain an estimate of the hospital cost per treated case
both in the CP and the prepathway group.
Statistical analyses
Between study groups, ordinal variables were compared with the Wilcoxon rank-
sum test. Dichotomous variables were compared with the chi-square test. P-values were
computed and an effect was considered statistically significant at p ≤ 0.05. SPSS 15.0
for Windows (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL) was used for all statistical analyses.
Results
Standardization and quality of perioperative care
The time of removal of invasive catheters is shown in figure 1. Removal of Foley
catheters took place significantly earlier in the CP group (p<0.01). Central venous lines
in the CP group were removed in all cases on the specified day or earlier whereas the
range of when the line was removed was much wider in the pre-pathway group. In pa-
tients who received an epidural analgesia catheter, it was removed in the majority of
cases in the CP group on day three, as stipulated in the CP, whereas the range of the
removal day was much wider in the pre-pathway group. Regarding chest drain removal,
the median did not differ significantly between groups, but there was considerably less
variation in the CP compared to the pre-pathway group. All patients in the CP group
were mobilized on the day of surgery and received a standardized pulmonary exercise
program including incentive deep breathing exerciser and mechanical chest treatment.
(not shown in figure).
Perioperative outcome quality
30 day mortality was nil in the CP group whereas two patients died in the pre-
pathway group: one case of respiratory failure after pleurodesis for mesothelioma with
malignant pleural effusion and one case of cardiogenic shock in a patient with NYHA IV
congestive heart failure and bullous emphysema operated for recurring pneumothorax
(table 2). The difference was statistically not significant. Morbidity in the CP group oc-
curred in 8.8% of patients in the CP and 27.3% in the pre-pathway group. This difference
did not reach statistical significance (p=0.08). Most of the morbidity in the pre-pathway
group was due to postoperative pneumothorax and/or skin emphysema. evision surgery
occurred in one patient (re-pleurodesis after postoperatively persisting malignant effu-
sion) in the CP group and no patient in the pre-pathway group. None of the patients
treated with the CP required readmission to the hospital in comparison to one patient
with wound infection in the pre-pathway group. Median pain levels on the visual analo-
gue scale (potential range 0-10) were 2 on postoperative day three and 0 on the day of
discharge. Since standardized pain documentation was initiated only upon CP imple-
mentation, no data for comparison are available from the pre-pathway group.
2
Length of hospital stay
The median length of stay in the hospital was five days shorter in the CP group as
compared to the prepathway group (p<0.05, table 3). Within both groups, patients re-
ceiving pleurodesis stayed significantly longer in the hospital compared to patients un-
dergoing atypical pulmonary resection.
Cost of hospital stay
Based on a calculated rate of €302 per day of hospital stay the mean length-of-
stay dependent cost per patient was €4228 in the pre-pathway group and €2718 in the
CP group (p<0.05, table 4). Consequently, the mean cost saving after introduction of the
CP was €1510 per patient treated. The relative effect of cost saving was stronger in pa-
tients undergoing lung resections (€1510 from a total of €3926; 39%) as compared to
patients undergoing thoracoscopic pleurodesis (€1510 from a total of €5738; 26%).
3
Discussion
Our study assessed the effects of a CP for patients undergoing VATS on process
and outcome quality as well as on hospital costs. We were able to measure several fea-
tures of perioperative care which had not been evaluated before when looking at CP
usage in thoracic surgery [6-10]. Specifically, our study is the first to demonstrate that
CPs are able to thoroughly standardize invasive catheter management. Central and epi-
dural lines were reserved for high-risk patients and removed in the vast majority of cases
at the point of time stipulated in the CP. Likewise, in the vast majority of cases foley ca-
theters were removed at the day of the operation or the day after. Although not formally
demonstrated in our relatively small study population, one can expect that the incidence
of catheter infections will be lowered in consequence of such standardization and de-
crease of overall catheter times [14]. Time of chest drainage removal did not show a
decline in variation in CP patients in the same pronounced manner. The reason is that
our CP foresees removal not on a specific day but rather when daily drainage is below a
defined volume. This specification was made to avoid complications caused by serotho-
rax. In contrast, a CP for VATS in Japan stipulated chest drain removal on postoperative
day four regardless of drainage volume. Unfortunately, it was not reported if this led to a
higher incidence of serothorax and concomitant complications [10].
Pain management is an element of treatment quality with particularly high relev-
ance for patients. A recently conducted study showed that enhanced recovery schemes
allow for timely discharge with no significant pain [15]. We had a similar experience in
our patients where pain levels were low throughout the hospital stay. This facilitated in-
tensified mobilization and respiratory exercising, which in turn can be assumed to pre-
vent pneumonia and thrombotic events [16]. There was no relevant pain observed upon
discharge. This underpins that CPs with enhanced recovery schemes do not lead to has-
tened discharge of unfit patients if sound perioperative standards are established and
adhered to.
As in the other available comparative studies [6;7;9;10], CP introduction led to a
significant shortening of hospital stay. In our case the reduction was particularly pro-
nounced, probably due to the meticulous integration of an enhanced recovery (“fast
track”) scheme into the CP. Frequently, such schemes are viewed with skepticism due to
fears of a higher incidence of postoperative complications. In line with findings from a
large observational series [12] a recently published RCT comparing “fast track” and con-
ventional perioperative care for lung resections demonstrated the opposite by showing
significantly reduced morbidity in the “fast track” arm [17]. In our patients, we also ob-
4
served a reduction in morbidity, which did however not reach statistical significance be-
cause of low case numbers. There seems to be a relevantly higher incidence of post-
operative pneumothorax and/or skin emphysema in the pre-pathway group. From our
data alone, it is not clear if this finding is merely due to chance or if the changes in chest
suction drainage management brought along with CP introduction played a role and led
to decreased morbidity. Likewise, there were no wound infections in the CP group, which
might be a result of improved management of invasive catheters and faster discharge.
These possible associations need to be assessed in studies with more statistical power.
Length of stay significantly differed between patients undergoing lung resection
and pleurodesis due to prolonged pleural fluid production in the latter, a phenomenon
which is well known [18]. Therefore, the relative reduction of hospital stay was smaller in
this group. Compared to regional and national standards, length of stay in the pre-
pathway group was above average whereas in the CP group it was roughly comparable
to that in similar facilities [18;19]. Compared to other countries like the US [20;21], length
of stay in both study groups appears exceedingly long. On the other hand side, in coun-
tries like Japan length of stay following VATS before and after CP implementation was
reported to be much longer than in our study [10]. This shows that there are structural
disparities in health systems and care mentalities which make direct cross-country com-
parisons of length of stay extremely difficult.
In addition to the evaluation of medical effects, we estimated the CP’s impact on
length-of stay dependent cost. We found a significant decrease of hospital costs as a
direct consequence of shortened length of stay. The magnitude of saved costs is roughly
in line with that reported in other studies [6;7;9;10]. Relative stay reduction and cost sav-
ing depended on the type of VATS. A much more pronounced effect was observed in
patients undergoing VATS wedge resection. Patients requiring pleurodesis had a longer
overall length of stay and thus the effect was smaller. This fact should incite a critical
consideration if two distinct CPs, but also two distinct DRGs, are needed for pleurodesis
and non-pleurodesis VATS. As an institutional consequence, we instituted a separate
CP for pleurodesis which foresees discharge one day later than in patients with non-
pleurodesis VATS.
The main limitation of our study is its non-randomized design with one retrospec-
tive group. Albeit desirable, the evaluation of CPs is virtually not feasible through rando-
mization within institutions. Once staff is trained to use specific elements of care as sti-
pulated in a CP, single patients can hardly be treated without applying these elements
even though they are formally not on a CP. In fact, to our knowledge there is only one
RCT assessing CPs in surgery [22]. Therefore, as in all other studies, the only viable
5
option was a “before-after” design, even though it bears the risk of structural inequality
between study groups. We tested for such inequality by comparing age, sex, type of sur-
gery and ASA status between groups and could not find significant differences. Howev-
er, there might have been residual differences in perioperative risk not addressed by
these variables. In addition, the frequency of the single types of VATS and the underly-
ing diagnoses differed significantly between the two groups. A drawback of the retros-
pective design is that secular changes in treatment quality occurring independently from
CP implementation might have biased our results. Data in our study are available only
for the first six months after CP implementation. Thus, case numbers and the power to
detect significant differences in perioperative and outcome quality are relatively low. In
analogy to technical procedures in surgery such as laparoscopy [23], there might be a
“learning curve” also for newly established care standards like CPs. If this was the case,
it would mean that implementation of our CP shows its full effects only after years and
the effects measured in this analysis might underestimate the real impact. Lastly, our
cost analysis is merely an approximation. Per diem length-of-stay-dependent costs were
estimated based on data of patients from one single year. Real costs for specific ele-
ments of care might have undergone a secular change unrelated to CP implementation,
which would have not been reflected in our analysis. In addition, we assumed that on
every day of hospital stay, on average the same length-of-stay-dependent cost was ac-
crued. This disregards a potential condensation of costs in the early postoperative phase
e.g. due to a more intensive need of nursing. The strength of our study is that we ana-
lyzed patients on an intention-to-treat basis. Even if certain goals of the CP such as re-
moval of a catheter at a given day were not met, patients were not taken “off the path-
way”. CP treatment was planned for all consecutive patients undergoing VATS, and all
patients were included in the analysis. Thus, selection bias in the CP group can be ruled
out. We believe that this approach is the best one to evaluate the true clinical value of
CPs because it is the closest representation of clinical reality, where CPs are meant to
be a tool for the treatment of all patients with a given condition or intervention and not
only one used for a highly selected group of patients who meet certain criteria.
Conclusion
Our study showed that perioperative quality of care, measured by selected impor-
tant parameters of perioperative VATS treatment, improved after implementation of a
multidisciplinary CP. In addition, we observed a significant cost reduction after CP im-
plementation. In the light of these findings we recommend the use of CPs for selected
interventions in thoracic surgery as an instrument to improve care. However, before
6
drawing definite conclusions, we recommend that further studies with more statistical
power and, ideally, two prospectively assessed groups, are conducted.
Acknowledgments
We thank Bärbel Rothhaar for providing financial data and Brigitte Pagel for valu-
able support in teaching nursery staff and explaining the importance of process im-
provement.
7
Table 1: Characteristics of the two study groups
Patient Characteristics
CP group
(n=34)
April-October 2007
Pre-pathway group
(n=77)
January 2005 - December 2006
Median age (years) 66 60
Gender (percent)
male 26 (76.5) 52 (67.5)
female 8 (23.5) 25 (32.5)
Underlying disorder
chronic pleural effusion 11 (32.4) 9 (11.7)
malignancy 13 (38.2) 32 (41.6)
pneumothorax / bullae 3 (8.8) 22 (28.5)
other 7 (20.6) a 14 (18.2)
a
Type of surgery (percent)
VATS wedge resection 23 (67.6) 68 (88.3)
VATS pleurodesis 11 (32.4)a 9 (11.7)
a
ASA class (percent)
1 1 (2.9 ) 14 (18.2)
2 11 (32.4) 26 (33.8)
3 22 (64.7) 36 (46.7)
4 0 1 (1.3)
ASA: American Society of Anaesthesiology
ap<0.05
Table 2: Parameters of outcome quality in the two study groups
CP Group
(n=34)
April-October 2007
Pre-pathway Group
(n=77)
January 2005 - December 2006
p-value
n % n %
30-day mortality
0
0
2
2.6
1.00
Morbidity
pneumothorax/skin
emphysema
wound infection
cardiopulmonary
other
3
1
0
1
1
8.8
2.9
0
2.9
2.9
21
11
4
2
4
27.3
14.3
5.2
2.6
5.2
0.08
Revision surgery
1 2.9 0 0 1.00
Re-admission 0 0 1 1.3 1.00
CP: clinical pathway
Table 3: Length of hospital stay in days in the two study groups
VATS: video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery
CP group
(n=34)
April-October
2007
Pre-pathway group
(n=77)
January 2005 - Decem-
ber 2006
Reduction
absolute in days
(relative in %)
All 9 14 5 (36)
VATS wedge resection 8 13 5 (39)
VATS pleurodesis 14 19 5 (26)
Table 4: Length-of-stay dependent hospital costs in the two study groups
CP group
(n=34)
April-October 2007
Pre-pathway group
(n=77)
January 2005 - December 2006
Saving per patient
absolute
(relative in %)
All
€2718
€4228
€1510 (36)
VATS wedge resection €2416 €3926 €1510 (39)
VATS pleurodesis €4228 €5738 €1510 (26)
VATS: video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery
Figure 1: Day of removal of invasive catheters. 2005/6: prepathway group; CP: standard
stipulated in the Clinical Pathway; 2007: CP group. Bold horizontal bars indicate median, box
indicates interquartile range, “Whiskers” indicate 5th and 95th percentile and small asterisks
and circles indicate outliers..
Figure 2: Sequential visualization of steps in the development and implementation of the CP.
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Recommended