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The Relationship Between Hospital Safety-Net Burden on Outcomes for High-Volume Thyroid Cancer Surgeons.

코호트 1/5 보강
Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association 📖 저널 OA 26.5% 2022: 19/59 OA 2023: 17/64 OA 2024: 24/66 OA 2025: 12/65 OA 2026: 3/32 OA 2022~2026 2025 Vol.35(1) p. 50-59
Retraction 확인
출처

PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 3/4)

유사 논문
P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
347 patients (78% female, median age 50), of whom 13,848 (32%) were treated by HV surgeons ( = 276).
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
surgery for thyroid cancer in California from 1999 to 2017
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
The performance of HV thyroid cancer surgeons differs by a hospital's safety-net burden, with patients treated at high safety-net burden hospitals experiencing higher rates of operative complications, disease-specific mortality, and all-cause mortality. Having a HV surgeon alone may be insufficient to provide optimal short- and long-term outcomes for patients with thyroid cancer.

Huston-Paterson HH, Mao YV, Tseng CH, Kim J, Chen DW, Wu JX

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

Higher center and surgeon volume correspond to better outcomes for patients with thyroid cancer.

🔬 핵심 임상 통계 (초록에서 자동 추출 — 원문 검증 권장)
  • 연구 설계 cohort study

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↓ .bib ↓ .ris
APA Huston-Paterson HH, Mao YV, et al. (2025). The Relationship Between Hospital Safety-Net Burden on Outcomes for High-Volume Thyroid Cancer Surgeons.. Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association, 35(1), 50-59. https://doi.org/10.1089/thy.2024.0268
MLA Huston-Paterson HH, et al.. "The Relationship Between Hospital Safety-Net Burden on Outcomes for High-Volume Thyroid Cancer Surgeons.." Thyroid : official journal of the American Thyroid Association, vol. 35, no. 1, 2025, pp. 50-59.
PMID 39527242 ↗

Abstract

Higher center and surgeon volume correspond to better outcomes for patients with thyroid cancer. This study aims to investigate how a hospital's safety-net burden, the proportion of a hospital's patients who are insured by state Medicaid plans or are uninsured, influences the outcomes of high-volume (HV) surgeons. We performed a retrospective cohort study of all patients who underwent surgery for thyroid cancer in California from 1999 to 2017. We stratified treating facilities by the proportion of Medicaid-type and indigent payors into safety-net burden quartiles. We compared the perioperative and oncologic outcomes of HV surgeons (annual case volume ≥10) for patients undergoing total thyroidectomy across safety-net burden quartiles. A mixed-effects regression model controlled for surgeon random effects and fixed effects of patient and tumor characteristics. Our sample comprised 42,347 patients (78% female, median age 50), of whom 13,848 (32%) were treated by HV surgeons ( = 276). Compared to patients of lower-volume surgeons, patients of HV surgeons were more likely to be White, from the upper quartiles of socioeconomic status and well insured (all < 0.001). HV surgeons in each hospital's safety-net burden quartile displayed similar case number distributions. Compared to patients treated by HV surgeons at Q1 (lowest safety-net burden) hospitals, those treated by HV surgeons at Q4 (highest safety-net burden) hospitals had higher absolute risks of endocrine complications (+7%, = 0.007), airway complications (+6%, = 0.004), disease-specific mortality (+1.3%, = 0.046), and all-cause mortality during the study period (+3%, = 0.046) in multivariable analysis. The performance of HV thyroid cancer surgeons differs by a hospital's safety-net burden, with patients treated at high safety-net burden hospitals experiencing higher rates of operative complications, disease-specific mortality, and all-cause mortality. Having a HV surgeon alone may be insufficient to provide optimal short- and long-term outcomes for patients with thyroid cancer.

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🏷️ 같은 키워드 · 무료전문 — 이 논문 MeSH/keyword 기반

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