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Variability in practice and factors predictive of total crystalloid administration during abdominal surgery: retrospective two-centre analysis. Br J Anaesth 2015 May;114(5):767-76

Date

01/15/2015

Pubmed ID

25586725

DOI

10.1093/bja/aeu452

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84928902781 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   107 Citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Variation in clinical practice in the perioperative environment and intensive care unit is a major challenge facing modern medicine. The objective of the present study was to analyse intraoperative crystalloid administration practices at two academic medical centres in the USA.

METHODS: We extracted clinical data from patients undergoing intra-abdominal procedures performed at UC Irvine (UCI) and Vanderbilt University (VU) Medical Centres. Limiting data to uncomplicated elective surgery with minimal blood loss, we quantified variability in fluid administration within individual providers, between providers, and between types of procedures using a corrected coefficient of variation (cCOV). Regression was performed using a general linear model to determine factors most predictive of fluid administration.

RESULTS: For provider analysis and model building, 1327 UCI and 4585 VU patients were used. The average corrected crystalloid infusion rate across all providers at both institutions was 7.1 (sd 4.9) ml kg(-1) h(-1), an overall cCOV of 70%. Individual providers ranged from 2.3 (sd 3.7) to 14 (sd 10) ml kg(-1) h(-1). The final regression model strongly favoured personnel as predictors over other patient predictors.

CONCLUSIONS: Wide variability in crystalloid administration was observed both within and between individual anaesthesia providers, which might contribute to variability in surgical outcomes.

Author List

Lilot M, Ehrenfeld JM, Lee C, Harrington B, Cannesson M, Rinehart J

Author

Jesse Ehrenfeld MD, MPH Sr Associate Dean, Director, Professor in the Advancing a Healthier Wisconsin Endowment department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Abdomen
Academic Medical Centers
Adult
Aged
Female
Fluid Therapy
Humans
Isotonic Solutions
Length of Stay
Male
Middle Aged
Practice Patterns, Physicians'
Retrospective Studies
United States