"Surgeons with higher volumes had significantly better functional preservation than those with lower volumes (p = 0.005). For a patient with the mean level of all covariates, the predicted probability of experiencing recovery of both erectile and urinary function at 1 yr was 21% if treated by a surgeon with an annual volume of 25 cases; this probability increased to 47% if the surgeon had an annual volume of 100."
Maybe availability and access to data differs? Do you in US have patient-reported functional outcomes in questionnaires from independent third party, that can be used for benchmarking between surgeons?
That only happens at top institutions (like MSK) or when there are studies done. I'd like to see it be done as part of routine practice. Urologists often have no clue what the functional outcomes are because patients don't tell them. It is particularly a problem for sexual function.
The heterogeneity in results between individual surgeons at the same department is never revealed. 0% vs. 40% incontinence between two individual surgeons with the same total volume is remarkable.
Of course. There used to be a freely-available website with evaluation of multiple surgeon metrics--complication rates, procedure volume, etc. That seems to have gone away, but there are sites that compile this information, on a subscription basis. It's not foolproof of course. Some surgeons get rated badly because they suck; others have higher complication rates because they are known to take on the most difficult cases. So sure, you have to use your critical thinking skills to evaluate these numbers. I have not myself subscribed to this one, for what it's worth:
A total of 8326 men underwent robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) between 2017 and 2019. All men answered a questionnaire one year after RARP. 14% (659/4 668) of the men were incontinent one year after RARP. There was no statistically significant association between surgeon volume and incontinence. The best surgeon had 0% incontinence, the the worst surgeon had 40% incontinence. Skill and talent played a bigger role than expected!
Talent may get you in the door, but repetition is undeniably the mother of skill. Skill only comes with the completion of numerous repetition. This is true in many different human physical function. Do you want to debate an Olympic Athlete?
You'll find the greatest number of repetitive operations performed at Major Cancer Center's, where local facilities and doctors cannot compete. There was a studiy completed on this very thing... Which contradicts the OP and has sunstansive supporting data.
That is one of the questions we asked our surgeon in our interview of him. If they dont know their exact % right after surgery and at one year on this and other functions, run the other way.
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