Background
Professional guidelines have reduced the recommended minimum number to an average of 50 PCI procedures performed annually by each operator. Operator volume patterns and associated outcomes since this change are unknown.
Objectives
To describe PCI operator procedure volumes; characteristics of low-, intermediate-, and high-volume operators; and the relationship between operator volume and clinical outcomes in a large, contemporary, nationwide sample
Methods
Using data from the nationally representative NCDR CathPCI registry collected between July 1, 2009 and March 31, 2015, we examined operator annual PCI volume. We divided operators into low- (< 50 PCIs/year), intermediate- (50–100 PCIs/year), and high-volume (> 100 PCIs/year) groups, and determined the adjusted association between annual PCI volume and in-hospital outcomes, including mortality.
Results
The median number of annual procedures performed per operator was 59 (25th, 75th percentiles: 21, 106); 44% of operators performed < 50 PCI procedures/year. Low-volume operators more frequently performed emergency and primary PCI procedures and practiced at hospitals with lower annual PCI volumes. Unadjusted in-hospital mortality was 1.86% for low-volume operators, 1.73% for intermediate-volume operators, and 1.53% for high-volume operators. The adjusted risk of in-hospital mortality was higher for PCI procedures performed by low- and intermediate-volume operators compared with those performed by high-volume operators (adjusted OR 1.16, 95% CI 1.12–1.21 for low vs. high; adjusted OR 1.05, 95% CI 1.02–1.09 for intermediate vs. high volume) as was the risk for new dialysis post PCI. No volume relationship was seen for post-PCI bleeding.
Conclusions
Many PCI operators in the U.S. are performing fewer than the recommended number of PCI procedures annually. Though absolute risk differences are small and may be partially explained by unmeasured differences in case mix between operators, there remains an inverse relationship between PCI operator volume and in-hospital mortality that persisted in risk-adjusted analyses.