Objective: To examine if the annual patient volume of infants born very preterm (VPT, gestational age <32 weeks) at a hospital is associated with neonatal mortality and morbidity.
Study design: We performed an observational, secondary data analysis using a 20-year panel of birth certificates linked to hospital discharge abstracts, including transfers in California, Michigan, Missouri, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina from 1996 through 2015. The study included all in-hospital VPT deliveries (n = 208 261). Study outcomes were in-hospital mortality or serious morbidity (intraventricular hemorrhage, necrotizing enterocolitis, retinopathy of prematurity, or bronchopulmonary dysplasia), attributed to the hospital of birth. Poisson regression models estimated the risk-adjusted relative risk (RR) for mortality and serious morbidity across different patient volume categories within a given hospital using hospital fixed effects.
Results: The risk of mortality and serious morbidity for VPT infants increased as the number of infants born VPT at a hospital decreased. Compared with VPT delivery volumes >100 infants per year, the risk of mortality increased when a given hospital had VPT delivery volumes < 60 per year, ranging from a RR of 1.13 (95% C.I. 1.02-1.25) for volumes between 50 to 59 and 1.39 (1.19-1.62) for VPT volumes <10, and the risk of mortality or serious morbidity increased when a given hospital had VPT volumes <100, ranging from a RR of 1.05 (1.02-1.08) for volumes between 90 to 99 and 1.27 (1.19-1.36) for VPT volumes <10.
Conclusions: These results suggest that, for VPT infants, the risk of both mortality and mortality or serious morbidity is increased as the VPT volume within a given hospital declines.
Published by Elsevier Inc.