Surgery in Practice and Science (Jun 2023)

Current use of the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program surgical risk calculator in academic surgery: a mixed-methods study

  • Samuel M. Miller,
  • Sara Abou Azar,
  • James S. Farrelly,
  • Garrett A. Salzman,
  • Meaghan E. Broderick,
  • Katherine M. Sanders,
  • Vincent P. Anto,
  • Nathan Patel,
  • Alfredo C. Cordova,
  • Kevin M. Schuster,
  • Tyler J. Jones,
  • Lisa M. Kodadek,
  • Cary P. Gross,
  • John M. Morton,
  • Ronnie A. Rosenthal,
  • Robert D. Becher

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13
p. 100173

Abstract

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Background: This study aims to quantitatively assess use of the NSQIP surgical risk calculator (NSRC) in contemporary surgical practice and to identify barriers to use and potential interventions that might increase use. Materials and methods: We performed a cross-sectional study of surgeons at seven institutions. The primary outcomes were self-reported application of the calculator in general clinical practice and specific clinical scenarios as well as reported barriers to use. Results: In our sample of 99 surgeons (49.7% response rate), 73.7% reported use of the NSRC in the past month. Approximately half (51.9%) of respondents reported infrequent NSRC use (<20% of preoperative discussions), while 14.3% used it in ≥40% of preoperative assessments. Reported use was higher in nonelective cases (30.2% vs 11.1%) and in patients who were ≥65 years old (37.1% vs 13.0%), functionally dependent (41.2% vs 6.6%), or with surrogate consent (39.9% vs 20.4%). NSRC use was not associated with training status or years in practice.Respondents identified a lack of influence on the decision to pursue surgery as well as concerns regarding the calculator's accuracy as barriers to use. Surgeons suggested improving integration to workflow and better education as strategies to increase NSRC use. Conclusions: Many surgeons reported use of the NSRC, but few used it frequently. Surgeons reported more frequent use in nonelective cases and frail patients, suggesting the calculator is of greater utility for high-risk patients. Surgeons raised concerns about perceived accuracy and suggested additional education as well as integration of the calculator into the electronic health record.

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