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Impact of the "July effect" in head and neck microvascular reconstruction: A retrospective review

Impact of the "July effect" in head and neck microvascular reconstruction: A retrospective review

摘要Objective::The "July effect," a theory that the beginning of the academic year has worse operative outcomes and complication rates, remains controversial. We evaluated the "July effect" as a risk factor for negative operative outcomes in head and neck microvascular reconstruction.Methods::Multi-institutional retrospective review at three academic tertiary care centers from January 2010 to August 2021. Free flaps were stratified by the academic quarter. Patient factors, operative variables, length of stay (LOS), flap failures, and postoperative complications and adverse events were compared between academic quarters 1 and 4.Results::We identified 2897 free flaps: 749 quarter 1 (Q1), 693 quarter 2 (Q2), 770 quarter 3 (Q3), and 685 quarter 4 (Q4). Overall flap failure rate was 4.9% ( n = 143), and the most common postoperative complications were wound infection (12.8%, n = 370) and dehiscence (7.6%, n= 221). There were no significant differences between quarters in overall complication rate, flap failures, partial flap necrosis, wound infection, fistula, or hematoma ( p > 0.05). There were also no significant differences in LOS or rates of 30-day readmission or reoperation ( p > 0.05). Q1 had significantly more dehiscences ( p = 0.04) and longer operative times ( p = 0.001) than Q4. Conclusion::Although Q1 surgeries had significantly longer operative times and higher dehiscence rates, we found no other differences in postoperative complications, flap failures, or adverse events by the academic quarter. While a "July effect" may exist due to the integration of new trainees into the surgical workflow, this effect does not translate into meaningful differences in overall free flap or patient outcomes.

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abstractsObjective::The "July effect," a theory that the beginning of the academic year has worse operative outcomes and complication rates, remains controversial. We evaluated the "July effect" as a risk factor for negative operative outcomes in head and neck microvascular reconstruction.Methods::Multi-institutional retrospective review at three academic tertiary care centers from January 2010 to August 2021. Free flaps were stratified by the academic quarter. Patient factors, operative variables, length of stay (LOS), flap failures, and postoperative complications and adverse events were compared between academic quarters 1 and 4.Results::We identified 2897 free flaps: 749 quarter 1 (Q1), 693 quarter 2 (Q2), 770 quarter 3 (Q3), and 685 quarter 4 (Q4). Overall flap failure rate was 4.9% ( n = 143), and the most common postoperative complications were wound infection (12.8%, n = 370) and dehiscence (7.6%, n= 221). There were no significant differences between quarters in overall complication rate, flap failures, partial flap necrosis, wound infection, fistula, or hematoma ( p > 0.05). There were also no significant differences in LOS or rates of 30-day readmission or reoperation ( p > 0.05). Q1 had significantly more dehiscences ( p = 0.04) and longer operative times ( p = 0.001) than Q4. Conclusion::Although Q1 surgeries had significantly longer operative times and higher dehiscence rates, we found no other differences in postoperative complications, flap failures, or adverse events by the academic quarter. While a "July effect" may exist due to the integration of new trainees into the surgical workflow, this effect does not translate into meaningful differences in overall free flap or patient outcomes.

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作者 De Ravin Emma [1] Cao Austin C. [2] Carey Ryan M. [2] Elliott Zachary [1] Sakkal Marah [3] Slijepcevic Allison [4] Petrisor Daniel [4] Taghizadeh Farshid [4] Newman Jason G. [5] Curry Joseph [1] Wax Mark K. [4] Cannady Steven B. [2] 学术成果认领
作者单位 Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA [1] Department of Otorhinolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA [2] Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA [3] Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon, USA [4] Department of Otolaryngology - Head amp; Neck Surgery, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA [5]
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DOI 10.1002/wjo2.233
发布时间 2025-12-28(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)
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