BJS, 2022, 1–12
2
DOI: 10.1093/bjsopen/zrab132
Original Article
Postoperative outcomes in oesophagectomy with trainee
involvement
Oesophago-Gastric Anastomosis Study Group (OGAA) on behalf of the West Midlands Research Collaborative
Abstract
Background: The complexity of oesophageal surgery and the significant risk of morbidity necessitates that oesophagectomy is predominantly performed by a consultant surgeon, or a senior trainee under their supervision. The aim of this study was to determine
the impact of trainee involvement in oesophagectomy on postoperative outcomes in an international multicentre setting.
Methods: Data from the multicentre Oesophago-Gastric Anastomosis Study Group (OGAA) cohort study were analysed, which comprised prospectively collected data from patients undergoing oesophagectomy for oesophageal cancer between April 2018 and
December 2018. Procedures were grouped by the level of trainee involvement, and univariable and multivariable analyses were performed to compare patient outcomes across groups.
Results: Of 2232 oesophagectomies from 137 centres in 41 countries, trainees were involved in 29.1 per cent of them (n ¼ 650), performing only the abdominal phase in 230, only the chest and/or neck phases in 130, and all phases in 315 procedures. For procedures
with a chest anastomosis, those with trainee involvement had similar 90-day mortality, complication and reoperation rates to
consultant-performed oesophagectomies (P ¼ 0.451, P ¼ 0.318, and P ¼ 0.382, respectively), while anastomotic leak rates were significantly lower in the trainee groups (P ¼ 0.030). Procedures with a neck anastomosis had equivalent complication, anastomotic leak,
and reoperation rates (P ¼ 0.150, P ¼ 0.430, and P ¼ 0.632, respectively) in trainee-involved versus consultant-performed oesophagectomies, with significantly lower 90-day mortality in the trainee groups (P ¼ 0.005).
Conclusion: Trainee involvement was not found to be associated with significantly inferior postoperative outcomes for selected
patients undergoing oesophagectomy. The results support continued supervised trainee involvement in oesophageal cancer surgery.
Members of the West Midlands Research Collaborative are co-authors of this study and are listed under the heading Collaborators.
Introduction
Oesophagectomy is associated with significant postoperative
morbidity and mortality, with over 60 per cent of patients
experiencing a postoperative complication, and reported 90-day
mortality rates of almost 5 per cent1–3. The complexity of oesophageal surgery and the significant risk of negative outcomes
necessitates that oesophagectomy is predominantly performed
by a consultant surgeon, or a senior trainee under direct supervision.
Current evidence on the impact of trainee involvement in
oesophagectomy is predominantly limited to single-centre,
small-volume retrospective series, and analyses of the American
College of Surgeons’ National Surgical Quality Improvement
Program (NSQIP) database. These studies have suggested that,
within structured supervised training, trainee input does not negatively impact on outcomes4–9. However, despite these findings,
concerns remain around involving trainees in oesophagectomy,
as other evidence from a variety of complex procedures from different surgical specialties has suggested increased morbidity
with trainee involvement. For example, trainee involvement in
major lower limb amputation is associated with increased major
morbidity, increased operative time, and an increased need for
intraoperative transfusions10. Similar findings have also been
reported for appendicectomy, cholecystectomy, and bariatric
procedures, with studies evaluating combined trainee-performed
and trainee-supervised procedures suggesting that trainee involvement increased morbidity, operative time, and length of
hospital stay11,12. In light of these findings, greater evaluation of
the impact of trainee involvement in oesophagectomy is
required, to determine the effect of training on patient outcomes.
Some countries publish surgeon-specific outcome data that
are freely available to the public13,14. Although this leads to
greater accountability, and the ability to compare outcomes
across units, it could potentially create an environment where
training opportunities are diminished due to fears that this could
negatively impact on published outcome data15,16. As such, it is
important to identify whether trainee involvement in oesophagectomy impacts patient outcome to dispel these fears, and
ensure that the next generation of surgeons receives adequate
training opportunities, in order to provide continued high-quality
oesophageal surgery in the future. The Oesophago-Gastric
Anastomosis Audit (OGAA) was an international multicentre
cohort study, investigating perioperative outcomes for patients
undergoing oesophagectomy for oesophageal cancer1,17,18. The
aim of this present study was to use the data from the OGAA
Received: August 05, 2021. Accepted: November 15, 2021
C The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of BJS Society Ltd.
V
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which
permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Correspondence to: Mr Richard P.T. Evans, Upper GI Research Fellow, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT,
UK (e-mail: r.evans.5@bham.ac.uk)
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BJS, 2022, Vol. 00, No. 0
cohort to determine the impact of trainee involvement on postoperative outcomes after oesophagectomy in an international
multicentre setting.
Methods
Study design of OGAA
Surgeon designation and involvement
Operation-specific characteristics were recorded for each procedure, including details of the operative techniques used, and the
designation of the primary surgeon performing each phase of
the operation. The OGAA included centres from 41 countries,
which used a variety of nomenclature for surgeon designation.
As such, a ‘consultant surgeon’ was defined as a surgeon with
an independent surgical practice inclusive of oesophagectomy.
All surgeons that did not meet these criteria were defined as a
‘trainee’. The primary operating surgeon was recorded for each
phase of the oesophagectomy, namely the abdomen and chest,
as well as the neck phase (in procedures with neck anastomosis). Oesophagectomies were defined as ‘Tabdomen’ where the
trainee performed only the abdominal phase, ‘Tchest’ where the
trainee performed only the chest (and/or neck) phase, or as
‘Tabdomenþchest’ where the trainee performed both the abdominal
and chest (and/or neck) phase. Procedures with no trainee involvement were denoted as ‘Tneither’.
Outcome measures
The primary aim of the study was to assess the impact of trainee
involvement on postoperative mortality, as defined as death
within 90 days from surgery. Secondary outcomes included the
rates and grades of either anastomotic leak or conduit necrosis,
complication rates, length of stay, need for reoperation, and 30day mortality. Complications were defined by the Esophageal
Complications Consensus Group (ECCG) framework19, and were
classified based on the Clavien–Dindo grade; the overall complication and major (grade III–V) complication rates were analysed
as separate outcomes. All outcomes were analysed separately by
the anastomosis location, as both operative difficulty and patient
outcomes are known to differ between procedures with chest and
neck anastomoses1,20.
Tumour staging was performed in accordance with the TNM
eighth edition21. Positive longitudinal and circumferential
tumour margins in the OGAA were defined as tumour identifiable 1 mm or less, in accordance with the Royal College of
Pathologists guidance22.
Ethical approval was dependent on local protocols and was country specific. It was the responsibility of the local principal investigator of the enrolled unit to ensure appropriate ethical or audit
approval was gained prior to commencement of the study. In the
UK, the study was registered at each site as either a clinical audit
or service evaluation, as it was an observational study designed
to collect routine, anonymized data, with no change to the clinical care pathway.
Statistical methods
Initially, cohort characteristics and outcomes were compared
across the four groups of trainee involvement. Continuous variables were analysed using Kruskal–Wallis tests, and reported as
mean (s.d.) if approximately normally distributed, with median
and interquartile range (i.q.r.) used otherwise. Ordinal variables
were also assessed using Kruskal–Wallis tests, with v2 tests used
for nominal variables.
For the primary outcomes, comparisons across the groups
were then repeated using a generalized estimating equation
approach, in order to account for potential non-independence of
outcomes for patients treated at the same centre. As such, the
centre was set as the subject variable, and the patient ID was the
within-subject variable, with an exchangeable correlation structure used. All outcomes considered in this analysis were dichotomous; hence, a binary logistic model was used. Initially,
univariable models were produced for each outcome, with the
trainee involvement being the only independent variable.
Multivariable models were then produced, to adjust for other potentially confounding factors. These used a backwards stepwise
approach (removal at P > 0.1) to select other patient-, tumour-,
and treatment-related factors for inclusion in the model. The
goodness-of-fit of continuous variables was assessed graphically
prior to producing the final model, with variables being divided
into categories and treated as nominal where poor fit was
detected. Where non-convergence of the model occurred owing
to small within-group sample sizes, the offending variables were
identified, and had categories combined to increase within-group
sample sizes, where possible. Where this could not be meaningfully performed, patients from the affected category were
excluded. The performance of the final multivariable models was
quantified using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC), and Hosmer–Lemeshow tests.
All analyses were performed using SPSS 22 (IBM, Armonk, NY,
USA), with P < 0.05 deemed to be indicative of statistical significance throughout.
Results
Cohort characteristics
Data were available for a total of 2247 oesophagectomies from
137 centres, of which 106, 30, and one were from high-, medium-,
and low-income countries, respectively. Contributing centres had
a median of three (i.q.r. 2–4) surgeons, 700 (i.q.r. 350–1020) total
hospital beds, and 24 (i.q.r. 14–36) ICU beds. Seventy-one per cent
of centres had a 24-hour on-call oesophageal surgery specialist,
and 68.7 per cent had a 24-hour on-call interventional radiology
specialist. Of the procedures recorded, 15 were excluded, either
because no anastomosis was performed (four procedures), no
anastomosis site was recorded (five procedures), or details of
trainee involvement were not recorded (six procedures). As such,
a total of 2232 procedures were included in the final analysis. Of
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The OGAA study was run by the Oesophago-Gastric Anastomosis
Study Group, on behalf of the West Midlands Research
Collaborative. The protocol for this study has previously been
published18. Centres performing oesophagectomy for oesophageal cancer were invited to contribute to the OGAA cohort, and
teams of surgeons, surgical trainees, research nurses, or medical
students prospectively identified eligible patients over a 9-month
period from 2 April 2018 to 31 December 2018. Patients were then
followed up for 90 days after the date of oesophagectomy, to
allow outcome data to be collected. At each centre, the nominated lead (consultant/attending only; see Appendix S1) was
assigned overall responsibility for centre level data, for performing data validation, and for ensuring complete case ascertainment. External review was not performed.
Ethical approval and data sharing for OGAA
Oesophago-Gastric Anastomosis Study Group (OGAA) on behalf of the West Midlands Research Collaborative
a
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3
b 100
Centre
80
60
40
20
0
0
20
40
60
80
100
Proportion of procedures (%)
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
No. of procedures
Fig. 1 Proportion of procedures with trainee involvement
a Per centre. b Per centre volume. Only the 41 centres that contributed more than 20 procedures to the analysis are included, such that percentages could be
reliably estimated. All procedures were included, regardless of the location of the anastomosis.
these, 650 (29.1 per cent) had trainee involvement, with a trainee
performing only the ‘abdominal’ phase in 230 procedures
(Tabdomen, 10.3 per cent), only the ‘chest and/or neck’ phase in 130
procedures (Tchest, 4.7 per cent), and ‘both’ phases in 315 procedures (Tabdomenþchest, 14.1 per cent).
The proportion of procedures with trainee involvement was
found to differ significantly across centres (P < 0.001, Fig. 1). For
the 41 centres that contributed more than 20 procedures to the
analysis, the proportion of trainee-involved procedures ranged
from 0 per cent (in 10 centres) to 100 per cent (in one centre).
There was no evidence of a significant correlation between the
centre volume and the proportion of trainee-involved oesophagectomies (Spearman’s rho: 0.046 (P ¼ 0.775), Fig. 1b). However,
trainee involvement rates were found to differ significantly by
continent (P < 0.001; Fig. S1), with the lowest rates in Africa (17.7
per cent) and Europe (23.8 per cent), and the highest rates in Asia
(62.5 per cent) and North America (75.2 per cent).
For subsequent analysis, procedures were divided by the site
of the anastomosis, with 1722 (77.2 per cent) being located in the
chest and 510 (22.8 per cent) in the neck.
Chest anastomosis
Baseline characteristics
In procedures with an anastomosis in the chest, a trainee performed only the abdominal phase in 175 procedures (Tabdomen,
10.2 per cent), only the chest phase in 93 procedures (Tchest, 5.4
per cent), both phases in 198 procedures (Tabdomenþchest, 11.5 per
cent), and in neither phase in 1256 (Tneither, 72.9 per cent). No significant differences in the distributions of age, sex, BMI, or ASA
grade were detected between these four groups (Table 1).
However, significant differences in rates of cardiovascular disease, current smokers, and squamous cell carcinoma histology
were observed, all of which were more frequent in the Tneither
group. In addition, a significant difference in Eastern Cooporative
Oncology Group (ECOG) status was observed, being lower in the
Tchest group, while the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) was significantly lower in the Tabdomenþchest group.
Comparison of the approach to treatment and surgery across
the groups found several significant differences, including the
use of pre- and postoperative nutritional support, neoadjuvant
therapy, anastomotic technique, operative approach, and gastric
tube size (Table 2).
Postoperative outcomes
On univariable analysis, 90-day mortality rates were found to be
similar across the four groups (P ¼ 0.451; Table 3). Secondary outcomes, including 30-day mortality (P ¼ 0.587), major complication
rates (P ¼ 0.933), and the proportion of cases requiring return to
theatre (P ¼ 0.382), were also not found to differ significantly
between groups. However, a significant difference in the composite rate of anastomotic leak or conduit necrosis was observed,
which was higher in procedures without trainee involvement
than those where trainees completed at least one phase (14.0 per
cent versus 6.3–11.6 per cent; P ¼ 0.030). Duration of surgery also
differed significantly between groups (P < 0.001), being longer
when the trainee was involved in any phase of the procedure.
The overall length of stay also differed significantly between
groups (P ¼ 0.010), tending to be shorter in procedures with
trainee involvement (median 11 versus 12 days), while ICU stay
tended to be longer in the Tchest and Tabdomenþchest groups
(median 4 days versus 3 days in other groups; P ¼ 0.009). The total
number of lymph nodes removed and the rate of positive margins
was not significantly different between groups (P ¼ 0.261 and
P ¼ 0.129, respectively).
Rates of 90-day mortality, anastomotic leaks or conduit
necrosis, and Clavien–Dindo Grade III–V complications were then
assessed using multivariable analysis (Table 4; Tables S1 and S2). It
was not possible to produce a reliable multivariable analysis of
90-day mortality, in light of the low event rate. For the other outcomes assessed, the multivariable models had reasonable performance, with AUROCs of 0.60–0.65, and P > 0.05 on Hosmer–
Lemeshow tests. Overall rates of anastomotic leaks or conduit
necrosis were significantly reduced in trainee-involved procedures on multivariable analysis (P ¼ 0.043), with the adjusted
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Proportion with trainee involvement (%)
Trainee involvement
Abdomen
Chest/neck
Abdomen+chest/neck
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BJS, 2022, Vol. 00, No. 0
Table 1 Cohort characteristics of procedures with chest anastomoses by trainee involvement
Trainee involvement
Neither
Abdomen
Chest
Abdomen þ chest
P-value
1722
1722
1717
1722
64.8 (9.9)
1029 (81.9)
26.7 (5.2)
65.2 (9.5)
140 (80.0)
27.2 (5.5)
66.0 (9.1)
75 (80.6)
26.6 (4.4)
63.2 (10.6)
155 (78.3)
26.9 (5.3)
0.101
0.632
0.725
0.580*
164 (13.1)
695 (55.3)
386 (30.7)
11 (0.9)
15 (8.6)
100 (57.1)
59 (33.7)
1 (0.6)
15 (16.1)
48 (51.6)
30 (32.3)
0 (0.0)
30 (15.2)
99 (50.0)
62 (31.3)
7 (3.5)
783 (62.4)
388 (30.9)
71 (5.7)
10 (0.8)
2 (0.2)
6 (5–6)
152 (12.1)
165 (13.1)
208 (16.6)
115 (66.1)
55 (31.6)
3 (1.7)
1 (0.6)
0 (0.0)
6 (5–6)
24 (13.7)
22 (12.6)
18 (10.3)
73 (78.5)
17 (18.3)
3 (3.2)
0 (0.0)
0 (0.0)
6 (5–6)
5 (5.4)
10 (10.8)
11 (11.8)
135 (68.2)
54 (27.3)
7 (3.5)
1 (0.5)
1 (0.5)
5 (4–6)
26 (13.1)
18 (9.1)
21 (10.6)
448 (36.9)
559 (46.0)
208 (17.1)
71 (41.3)
86 (50.0)
15 (8.7)
31 (33.7)
50 (54.3)
11 (12.0)
85 (43.8)
85 (43.8)
24 (12.4)
1024 (81.5)
195 (15.5)
37 (2.9)
158 (90.3)
14 (8.0)
3 (1.7)
79 (84.9)
10 (10.8)
4 (4.3)
172 (87.3)
24 (12.2)
1 (0.5)
1121 (89.3)
91 (7.2)
5 (0.4)
39 (3.1)
166 (94.9)
7 (4.0)
0 (0.0)
2 (1.1)
85 (91.4)
4 (4.3)
0 (0.0)
4 (4.3)
179 (90.9)
11 (5.6)
0 (0.0)
7 (3.6)
155 (12.5)
196 (15.8)
188 (15.1)
430 (34.6)
273 (22.0)
24 (13.8)
34 (19.5)
16 (9.2)
60 (34.5)
40 (23.0)
13 (14.0)
11 (11.8)
13 (14.0)
33 (35.5)
23 (24.7)
19 (9.6)
32 (16.2)
21 (10.7)
77 (39.1)
48 (24.4)
0.006*
1719
1722
1722
1722
1722
1673
0.048
0.204
0.418
0.027
0.027
0.020
1721
1721
0.453
1706
0.469*
Continuous data are reported as median (i.q.r.) or mean (s.d.), with P-values obtained from Kruskal–Wallis tests. Categorical data are reported as n (column %), with
P-values from v2 tests, unless stated otherwise. Bold P-values are significant at < 0.05. *P-value from Kruskal–Wallis test, as the factor is ordinal. ECOG, Eastern
Cooperative Oncology Group; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
rates being lowest in the Tabdomen group (versus Tneither; odds ratio
(OR) 0.45, 95 per cent c.i. 0.25–0.80; P ¼ 0.006).
Neck anastomosis
Baseline characteristics
The analysis was then repeated for the subgroup of 510 procedures with anastomoses in the neck. Of these, a trainee performed only the abdominal phase in 55 procedures (Tabdomen,
10.8 per cent), the chest and/or neck phase only in 12 procedures (Tchest, 2.4 per cent), both phases in 117 procedures
(Tabdomenþchest, 22.9 per cent), and in neither phase in 326 procedures (Tneither, 63.9 per cent). Comparison of cohort characteristics across these groups found significant differences in age,
ECOG status, CCI, smoking status, and tumour location (Table 5).
In addition, differences in a range of factors relating to the operative approach were observed (Table 6).
Postoperative outcomes
Univariable analysis found significant differences in both 90-day
mortality rates (P ¼ 0.005) and Clavien–Dindo Grade III–V complication rates (P ¼ 0.028) between the four groups, both of which
were lower in the groups with trainee involvement (Table 7).
There was no significant difference in the rate of anastomotic
leak/conduit necrosis (P ¼ 0.430). Duration of surgery was not significantly different between groups (P ¼ 0.133). The overall length
of stay and ICU stay were significantly shorter in procedures with
trainee involvement (P ¼ 0.013 and P ¼ 0.033, respectively). The
number of lymph nodes removed did not significantly differ
between groups (P ¼ 0.220); however, procedures without trainee
involvement were significantly more likely to have positive margins (P ¼ 0.041).
Multivariable analysis was not possible for the outcome of 90day mortality, on account of the small number of events. After
adjustment for other confounding factors, the difference between
groups in the rate of Clavien–Dindo grade III–V complications
became non-significant (P ¼ 0.185; Table 8 and Tables S1 and S2).
Discussion
This analysis of an international multicentre cohort found no evidence to suggest that trainee involvement in oesophagectomy
negatively impacts on postoperative outcome. Postoperative
mortality, anastomotic leak rate, and complications were not significantly inferior when a trainee performed all or part of an
oesophagectomy. Importantly, some key postoperative outcome
measures, including the anastomotic leak rate and length of stay
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Age (years)
Sex (% male)
BMI (kg/m2)
ASA grade
1
2
3
4
ECOG performance status
0
1
2
3
4
Charlson Comorbidity Index
COPD
Diabetes
Cardiovascular disease
Smoking status
Never
Ex-smoker
Current
Histology
Adenocarcinoma
Squamous cell carcinoma
Other
Tumour location
Distal/Siewert 1–2
Middle
Proximal
Siewert 3
TNM stage (on pathology)
Stage 0
Stage I
Stage II
Stage III
Stage IV
n
Oesophago-Gastric Anastomosis Study Group (OGAA) on behalf of the West Midlands Research Collaborative
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5
Table 2 Treatment approach in procedures with chest anastomoses by trainee involvement
Trainee involvement
Neither
n
Chest
Abdomen þ chest
< 0.001
1720
643 (51.3)
490 (39.1)
95 (7.6)
26 (2.1)
88 (50.3)
64 (36.6)
21 (12.0)
2 (1.1)
38 (40.9)
44 (47.3)
10 (10.8)
1 (1.1)
123 (62.1)
49 (24.7)
25 (12.6)
1 (0.5)
350 (27.9)
374 (29.8)
530 (42.2)
2 (0.2)
35 (20.0)
54 (30.9)
86 (49.1)
0 (0.0)
15 (16.1)
20 (21.5)
58 (62.4)
0 (0.0)
28 (14.1)
56 (28.3)
114 (57.6)
0 (0.0)
539 (42.9)
591 (47.1)
125 (10.0)
60 (34.3)
108 (61.7)
7 (4.0)
35 (37.6)
53 (57.0)
5 (5.4)
90 (45.5)
104 (52.5)
4 (2.0)
851 (67.8)
175 (13.9)
230 (18.3)
93 (53.1)
34 (19.4)
48 (27.4)
56 (60.2)
16 (17.2)
21 (22.6)
145 (73.2)
19 (9.6)
34 (17.2)
686 (55.1)
559 (44.9)
113 (64.6)
62 (35.4)
67 (72.0)
26 (28.0)
69 (34.8)
129 (65.2)
323 (25.7)
932 (74.3)
88 (50.3)
87 (49.7)
4 (4.3)
89 (95.7)
45 (22.7)
153 (77.3)
719 (57.3)
536 (42.7)
121 (69.1)
54 (30.9)
40 (43.0)
53 (57.0)
114 (57.6)
84 (42.4)
815 (64.9)
145 (11.5)
31 (2.5)
265 (21.1)
24 (17–33)
103 (58.9)
27 (15.4)
6 (3.4)
39 (22.3)
24 (19–33)
65 (69.9)
3 (3.2)
1 (1.1)
24 (25.8)
23 (17–30)
129 (65.2)
20 (10.1)
4 (2.0)
45 (22.7)
23 (15–32)
< 0.001
1722
< 0.001
1721
0.002
1722
< 0.001
1711
< 0.001
1721
< 0.001
1721
1722
1714
P-value
0.200
0.261
Continuous data are reported as median (i.q.r.), with P-values obtained from Kruskal–Wallis tests. Categorical data are reported as n (column %), with P-values
obtained from v2 tests. Bold P-values are significant at < 0.05.
Table 3 Outcomes of procedures with chest anastomoses by trainee involvement
Trainee involvement
n
90-day mortality
Anastomotic leak/necrosis
Anastomotic leak/necrosis grade
None
Grade 1
Grade 2
Grade 3
Any complication
Clavien–Dindo Grade III–V complication
Duration of surgery (min)
Positive margins
ICU length of stay (days)
Total length of stay (days)
Return to theatre
30-day mortality
1722
1722
1722
1722
1722
1709
1722
1714
1714
1722
1722
Neither
41 (3.3)
176 (14.0)
1080 (86.0)
75 (6.0)
60 (4.8)
41 (3.3)
763 (60.7)
307 (24.4)
341 (270–420)
243 (19.3)
3 (1–7)
12 (9–18)
144 (11.5)
25 (2.0)
Abdomen
7 (4.0)
11 (6.3)
164 (93.7)
4 (2.3)
4 (2.3)
3 (1.7)
109 (62.3)
43 (24.6)
380 (315–450)
29 (16.6)
3 (1–5)
11 (9–15)
18 (10.3)
3 (1.7)
Chest
1 (1.1)
10 (10.8)
83 (89.2)
4 (4.3)
2 (2.2)
4 (4.3)
62 (66.7)
20 (21.5)
380 (330–420)
26 (28.0)
4 (2–6)
11 (9–17)
7 (7.5)
0 (0.0)
Abdomen þ chest
4 (2.0)
23 (11.6)
175 (88.4)
10 (5.1)
3 (1.5)
10 (5.1)
132 (66.7)
49 (24.7)
371 (300–420)
43 (21.7)
4 (2–7)
11 (9–15)
28 (14.1)
4 (2.0)
P-value
0.451
0.030
0.035*
0.318
0.933
< 0.001
0.129
0.010
0.009
0.382
0.587
Continuous data are reported as median (i.q.r.), with P-values obtained from Kruskal–Wallis tests. Categorical data are reported as n (column %), with P-values
obtained from v2 tests. Bold P-values are significant at < 0.05. *P-value from Kruskal–Wallis test, as the factor is ordinal.
in patients with an anastomosis in the chest, were found to be
superior in procedures with trainee involvement. Patients undergoing oesophagectomy with trainee involvement were found to
be significantly less comorbid and had different treatment
approaches, as compared to consultant-performed oesophagectomy, suggesting that appropriate patient selection for training
procedures occurred, which may have helped ensure safe patient
outcomes.
Concerns exist about the safety of trainee involvement in
complex surgery. For example, trainee-performed hepatectomy
and pancreatectomy have been shown to be associated with
increased complication rates and operative times23. In the case of
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Preoperative nutrition
None
Oral supplements
Enteral tube nutrition
Parenteral nutrition
Neoadjuvant therapy
None
Chemoradiotherapy
Chemotherapy alone
Radiotherapy alone
Postoperative nutrition
None
Feeding jejunostomy
Nasojejunal tube
Anastomosis technique
Circular stapled
Handsewn
Linear stapled
Abdominal phase
Minimally invasive
Open
Thoracic phase
Minimally invasive
Open
Gastric tube
Thin (< 5 cm)
Wide/whole stomach
Pyloric procedures
Not performed
Botox/dilatation
Pyloromyotomy
Pyloroplasty
Lymph nodes removed
Abdomen
6
|
BJS, 2022, Vol. 00, No. 0
Table 4 Summary of univariable and multivariable models of primary outcomes in chest anastomoses
90-day mortality
OR (95% c.i.)
Clavien-Dindo grade III–V complication
P-value
OR (95% c.i.)
P-value
OR (95% c.i.)
P-value
0.258
–
0.543
0.213
0.252
–
0.42 (0.25–0.71)
0.76 (0.44–1.32)
0.79 (0.49–1.30)
0.012
–
0.001
0.331
0.356
–
1.06 (0.72–1.57)
0.90 (0.51–1.58)
0.99 (0.60–1.63)
0.963
–
0.775
0.704
0.957
NA*
–
–
–
–
–
0.45 (0.25–0.80)
0.73 (0.40–1.32)
0.94 (0.60–1.48)
0.043
–
0.006
0.293
0.788
–
1.11 (0.73–1.70)
0.88 (0.48–1.60)
1.03 (0.63–1.67)
0.896
–
0.625
0.668
0.919
Univariable analyses are from generalized estimating equation models, accounting for correlations between procedures from the same centre. Multivariable
analyses extend these models to additionally adjust for all factors in Tables 1 and 2—full details of the multivariable models are reported in Tables S1 and S2. Bold
P-values are significant at < 0.05. OR, odds ratio; c.i., confidence interval. *It was not possible to produce a multivariable model of 90 day mortality, due to the low
event rate.
Table 5 Cohort characteristics of procedures with neck anastomoses by trainee involvement
Trainee involvement
Age (years)
Sex (% male)
BMI (kg/m2)
ASA grade
1
2
3
4
ECOG performance status
0
1
2
3
4
Charlson Comorbidity Index
COPD
Diabetes
Cardiovascular disease
Smoking status
Never
Ex-smoker
Current
Histology
Adenocarcinoma
Squamous cell carcinoma
Other
Tumour location
Distal/Siewert 1–2
Middle
Proximal
Siewert 3
TNM stage (on pathology)
Stage 0
Stage I
Stage II
Stage III
Stage IV
n
Neither
Abdomen
Chest/neck
Abdomen þ chest/neck
P-value
510
510
510
510
63.4 6 11.6
236 (72.4)
24.6 6 5.0
58.3 6 12.1
35 (63.6)
23.7 6 4.1
64.3 6 8.7
9 (75.0)
25.0 6 5.0
56.6 6 12.2
77 (65.8)
23.6 6 5.2
< 0.001
0.381
0.135
0.072*
45 (13.8)
188 (57.7)
91 (27.9)
2 (0.6)
8 (14.5)
36 (65.5)
10 (18.2)
1 (1.8)
3 (25.0)
1 (8.3)
8 (66.7)
0 (0.0)
13 (11.1)
86 (73.5)
18 (15.4)
0 (0.0)
154 (47.2)
139 (42.6)
30 (9.2)
3 (0.9)
0 (0.0)
6 (5–7)
55 (16.9)
43 (13.2)
59 (18.1)
23 (42.6)
28 (51.9)
3 (5.6)
0 (0.0)
0 (0.0)
5 (4–6)
9 (16.4)
5 (9.1)
11 (20.0)
7 (58.3)
5 (41.7)
0 (0.0)
0 (0.0)
0 (0.0)
6 (5–7)
4 (33.3)
1 (8.3)
2 (16.7)
69 (59.5)
43 (37.1)
4 (3.4)
0 (0.0)
0 (0.0)
5 (4–6)
31 (26.5)
6 (5.1)
10 (8.5)
110 (34.9)
147 (46.7)
58 (18.4)
29 (55.8)
14 (26.9)
9 (17.3)
3 (25.0)
8 (66.7)
1 (8.3)
57 (48.7)
46 (39.3)
14 (12.0)
146 (44.8)
171 (52.5)
9 (2.8)
25 (45.5)
29 (52.7)
1 (1.8)
7 (58.3)
5 (41.7)
0 (0.0)
37 (31.6)
77 (65.8)
3 (2.6)
191 (58.6)
84 (25.8)
44 (13.5)
7 (2.1)
43 (78.2)
7 (12.7)
4 (7.3)
1 (1.8)
7 (58.3)
4 (33.3)
0 (0.0)
1 (8.3)
78 (66.7)
31 (26.5)
4 (3.4)
4 (3.4)
60 (18.8)
44 (13.8)
70 (21.9)
91 (28.4)
55 (17.2)
17 (30.9)
5 (9.1)
11 (20.0)
13 (23.6)
9 (16.4)
2 (16.7)
2 (16.7)
3 (25.0)
3 (25.0)
2 (16.7)
34 (29.1)
17 (14.5)
25 (21.4)
28 (23.9)
13 (11.1)
0.043*
508
510
510
510
510
496
510
< 0.001
0.075
0.107
0.088
0.019
0.249
0.019
510
504
0.076*
Continuous data are reported as median (i.q.r.) or mean (s.d.), with P-values obtained from Kruskal–Wallis tests. Categorical data are reported as n (column %), with
P-values from v2 tests, unless stated otherwise. Bold P-values are significant at < 0.05. COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. *P-value from Kruskal–Wallis
test, as the factor is ordinal.
oesophagectomy, Phillips et al. reported on outcomes of 323 open
Ivor Lewis procedures, 75 per cent of which had a trainee performing at least one stage. They reported no significant difference in pre-operative co-morbidity or staging and, furthermore,
no significant differences in postoperative outcomes or 2-year
survival rates in trainee- versus consultant-performed oesophagectomy5. Handagala et al. reported on 323 oesophagectomies,
which used a variety of techniques, with 37 per cent being
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Univariable models
Trainee involvement
Neither
–
Abdomen
1.23 (0.63–2.43)
Chest
0.32 (0.05–1.93)
Abdomen þ chest
0.60 (0.25–1.44)
Summary of multivariable models
Trainee involvement
Neither
–
Abdomen
–
Chest
–
Abdomen þ chest
–
Anastomotic leak/conduit necrosis
Oesophago-Gastric Anastomosis Study Group (OGAA) on behalf of the West Midlands Research Collaborative
|
7
Table 6 Treatment approach in procedures with neck anastomoses by trainee involvement
Trainee involvement
n
Abdomen
Chest/neck
Abdomen þ chest/neck
< 0.001
510
164 (50.3)
112 (34.4)
44 (13.5)
6 (1.8)
21 (38.2)
29 (52.7)
5 (9.1)
0 (0.0)
2 (16.7)
7 (58.3)
3 (25.0)
0 (0.0)
35 (29.9)
39 (33.3)
43 (36.8)
0 (0.0)
89 (27.3)
174 (53.4)
59 (18.1)
4 (1.2)
11 (20.0)
35 (63.6)
9 (16.4)
0 (0.0)
5 (41.7)
6 (50.0)
1 (8.3)
0 (0.0)
18 (15.4)
80 (68.4)
19 (16.2)
0 (0.0)
86 (26.4)
166 (50.9)
74 (22.7)
10 (18.2)
31 (56.4)
14 (25.5)
4 (33.3)
5 (41.7)
3 (25.0)
28 (23.9)
39 (33.3)
50 (42.7)
14 (4.3)
200 (61.3)
112 (34.4)
0 (0.0)
46 (83.6)
9 (16.4)
0 (0.0)
10 (83.3)
2 (16.7)
3 (2.6)
100 (85.5)
14 (12.0)
159 (48.8)
167 (51.2)
30 (54.5)
25 (45.5)
8 (66.7)
4 (33.3)
63 (53.8)
54 (46.2)
165 (50.8)
160 (42.9)
33 (61.1)
21 (38.9)
5 (41.7)
7 (58.3)
74 (64.3)
41 (35.7)
166 (51.1)
159 (48.9)
43 (78.2)
12 (21.8)
9 (75.0)
3 (25.0)
107 (91.5)
10 (8.5)
233 (71.5)
16 (4.9)
14 (4.3)
63 (19.3)
19 (12–24)
23 (41.8)
14 (25.5)
4 (7.3)
14 (25.5)
18 (15–29)
510
0.128
0.002
510
< 0.001
510
510
0.479
0.045
506
< 0.001
509
< 0.001
510
509
P-value
11 (91.7)
0 (0.0)
0 (0.0)
1 (8.3)
16 (7–20)
34 (29.1)
26 (22.2)
47 (40.2)
10 (8.5)
18 (14–24)
0.220
Continuous data are reported as median (i.q.r.), with P-values obtained from Kruskal–Wallis tests. Categorical data are reported as n (column %), with P-values
obtained from v2 tests. Bold P-values are significant at < 0.05.
Table 7 Outcomes of procedures with neck anastomoses by trainee involvement
Trainee involvement
n
90-day mortality
Anastomotic leak/necrosis
Anastomotic leak/necrosis grade
None
Grade 1
Grade 2
Grade 3
Any complication
Clavien–Dindo grade III–V complication
Duration of surgery (min)
Positive margins
ICU length of stay (days)
Total length of stay (days)
Return to theatre
30-day mortality
510
510
510
510
510
500
510
505
505
510
510
Neither
39 (12.0)
69 (21.2)
257 (78.8)
44 (13.5)
9 (2.8)
16 (4.9)
234 (71.8)
108 (33.1)
348 (250–480)
50 (15.3)
4 (2–7)
14 (10–23)
45 (13.8)
31 (9.5)
Abdomen
1 (1.8)
10 (18.2)
45 (81.8)
6 (10.9)
0 (0.0)
4 (7.3)
31 (56.4)
14 (25.5)
320 (255–364)
7 (12.7)
2 (1–5)
12 (8–17)
9 (16.4)
1 (1.8)
Chest/neck
0 (0.0)
4 (33.3)
8 (66.7)
3 (25.0)
0 (0.0)
1 (8.3)
8 (66.7)
3 (25.0)
360 (318–450)
2 (16.7)
2 (1–5)
21 (11–29)
1 (8.3)
0 (0.0)
Abdomen þ chest/neck
4 (3.4)
19 (16.2)
98 (83.8)
13 (11.1)
1 (0.9)
5 (4.3)
81 (69.2)
22 (18.8)
330 (274–380)
6 (5.1)
3 (1–7)
12 (9–17)
12 (10.3)
4 (3.4)
P-value
0.005
0.430
0.453*
0.150
0.028
0.133
0.041
0.033
0.013
0.632
0.036
Continuous data are reported as median (i.q.r.), with P-values obtained from Kruskal–Wallis tests. Categorical data are reported as n (column %), with P-values from
v2 tests, unless stated otherwise. Bold P-values are significant at < 0.05. *P-value from Kruskal–Wallis test, as the factor is ordinal.
performed by a trainee. They also found no significant differences in patient comorbidities or preoperative treatment, or in postoperative morbidity or mortality between procedures with or
without trainee involvement. Finally, Baron et al. reported on a
similar case mix, including 241 open thoracoabdominal two- and
three-stage oesophagectomies, 35 per cent of which were performed by a trainee. However, they found trainee-performed
oesophagectomies to have significantly higher anastomotic leak
rates (consultant 7 per cent versus trainee 20 per cent), although
this did not lead to a significant difference in postoperative mortality or survival between the two groups4.
Saliba et al., using NSQIP data, reported outcomes from nine
different surgical specialties on 1 349 684 patients, appraising
trainee and patient outcomes. Procedures with trainee
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Preoperative nutrition
None
Oral supplements
Enteral tube nutrition
Parenteral nutrition
Neoadjuvant therapy
None
Chemoradiotherapy
Chemotherapy alone
Radiotherapy alone
Postoperative nutrition
None
Feeding jejunostomy
Nasojejunal tube
Anastomosis technique
Circular stapled
Handsewn
Linear stapled
Abdominal phase
Minimally invasive
Open
Thoracic phase
Minimally invasive
Open
Gastric tube
Thin (< 5 cm)
Wide/whole stomach
Pyloric procedures
Not performed
Botox/dilatation
Pyloromyotomy
Pyloroplasty
Lymph nodes removed
Neither
8
|
BJS, 2022, Vol. 00, No. 0
Table 8 Summary of univariable and multivariable models of primary outcomes in neck anastomoses
90-day mortality
OR (95% c.i.)
Clavien-Dindo grade III–V complication
P-value
OR (95% c.i.)
P-value
OR (95% c.i.)
P-value
0.014
–
NA*
NA*
0.014*
–
1.13 (0.64–1.97)
1.59 (0.49–5.20)
0.77 (0.48–1.26)
0.380
–
0.680
0.442
0.303
–
0.63 (0.31–1.27)
0.73 (0.22–2.37)
0.50 (0.31–0.80)
0.041
–
0.199
0.595
0.004
–
0.58 (0.24–1.38)
0.69 (0.21–2.30)
0.55 (0.31–0.99)
0.185
–
0.217
0.541
0.045
NA*,†
–
–
–
–
0.090
0.90 (0.36–2.22)
1.46 (0.34–6.20)
0.47 (0.24–0.90)
0.820
0.611
0.022
Univariable analyses are from generalised estimating equation models, accounting for correlations between procedures from the same centre. Multivariable
analyses extend these models to additionally adjust for all factors in Tables 1 and 2—full details of the multivariable models are reported in Tables S1 and S2. Bold
P-values are significant at < 0.05. OR, odds ratio; *OR represents a comparison of any trainee involvement versus no trainee involvement, due to the within-group
sample sizes being insufficient to produce a reliable model comparing across four groups. †It was not possible to produce a multivariable model of 90-day
mortality, due to the low event rate.
involvement were performed on younger, more functionally independent patients with a lower BMI but higher ASA grades.
Subsequent postoperative morbidity was comparable, operative
duration was longer, and overall mortality was lower when trainees were involved24. A similar analysis of NSQIP data by Ferraris
et al. in 266 411 procedures used propensity matching to control
for baseline differences between groups, and showed that,
although procedures with trainee involvement were associated
with increased morbidity, mortality rates were comparable25.
Patients with similar levels of complications were increasingly
likely to suffer ‘failure to rescue’ in consultant-performed cases,
demonstrating that trainee involvement may be protective for
patients. In a NSQIP analysis by Cobb et al., propensity-matched
patients undergoing oesophagectomy had a significantly lower
mortality in trainee-performed cases8. Khoushhal et al. evaluated
outcomes for 5142 oesophagectomies from the NSQIP database
and found that neither surgical specialty (cardiothoracic, general
surgery) nor trainee involvement influenced mortality9. However,
a major limitation when evaluating trainee involvement in procedures using NSQIP data is that the NSQIP definition of trainee involvement is trainee ‘in’ or ‘not in’ the operating room, and does
not define the degree to which the trainee is involved (assisting or
performing), as is the case of the presented analysis of the OGAA
cohort.
There remains a lack of data analysing the effect of training in
minimally invasive oesophagectomy (MIE). The OGAA study provides postoperative outcomes on 2232 oesophagectomies; trainees were involved in 28.4 per cent of open versus 26.4 per cent of
hybrid and 32.9 per cent of MIE procedures, demonstrating that
modern trainees are receiving similar levels of exposure to both
open and minimally invasive oesophageal surgery. The learning
curve associated with MIE is associated with a significant
increase in postoperative morbidity, including an associated
increase in anastomotic leak rates of an additional 10 per
cent26,27. In a retrospective study of 2121 consultant-performed
Ivor Lewis MIEs, Claassen et al. showed that the length of the
learning curve for textbook outcome was 46 cases, after which a
plateau was reached, with 44.0 per cent achieving a textbook outcome28. Evidence from novel robotic oesophagectomy training
programmes shows that safety can be maintained while reducing
the learning curve to 22 cases29.
The current study has some limitations. There was considerable variability in rates of trainee involvement between centres,
which varied from 0 to 100 per cent. This may have contributed
to the significant differences between groups in the factors relating to the operative approach, which is generally centre related,
and so may have introduced bias, particularly if higher-quality
centres were more likely to engage in training. In an attempt to
negate such confounding, multivariable models were used to
adjust for within-centre correlation of outcomes, and for baseline
differences between groups. However, these were limited by the
small within-group sample sizes and the low event rates for
some outcomes, hence residual confounding may remain. The
small within-group sample sizes, particularly for the subgroup of
neck anastomoses, will also have reduced the statistical power of
the comparisons across the groups of trainee involvement. This
will have increased the minimal detectable effect sizes, resulting
in an increased false-negative rate. When defining the groups,
surgeons were classified as either ‘consultant’ or ‘trainee’.
However, training grade is known to convey differing levels of
autonomy and ability, depending on the level of experience.
Owing to the variability in nomenclature and training structures
across countries, it was not possible to ascertain further details
about the grade or level of experience of trainees; hence, it was
not possible to assess variability in outcome within subgroups of
trainees30. It was also not possible to identify cases where the primary surgeon was a consultant who had taken over from the
trainee due to operative difficulty which, in such cases, may be at
higher risk of negative outcomes, owing to increased operative
difficulty.
Collaborators
R.P.T. Evans, S.K. Kamarajah, J. Bundred, D. Nepogodiev, J.
Hodson, R. van Hillegersberg, J. Gossage, R. Vohra, E.A. Griffiths,
P. Singh, R.P.T. Evans, J. Hodson, S.K. Kamarajah, E.A. Griffiths, P.
Singh, D. Alderson, J. Bundred, R.P.T. Evans, J. Gossage, E.A.
Griffiths, B. Jefferies, S.K. Kamarajah, S. McKay, I. Mohamed, D.
Nepogodiev, K. Siaw- Acheampong, P. Singh, R. van Hillegersberg,
R. Vohra, K. Wanigasooriya, T. Whitehouse, A. Gjata (Albania), J.I.
Moreno (Argentina), F.R. Takeda (Brazil), B. Kidane (Canada), R.
Guevara Castro (Colombia), T. Harustiak (Czech Republic), A.
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Univariable models
Trainee involvement
Neither
–
Abdomen
NA*
Chest
NA*
Abdomen þ chest
0.30 (0.11–0.78)*
Summary of multivariable models
Trainee involvement
Neither
–
Abdomen
–
Chest
–
Abdomen þ chest
–
Anastomotic leak/conduit necrosis
Oesophago-Gastric Anastomosis Study Group (OGAA) on behalf of the West Midlands Research Collaborative
9
Português de Oncologia de Lisboa, Portugal); R.C.T. Costa
(Instituto Português de Oncologia do Porto, Portugal); R.R. Scurtu
(University Emergency Cluj County Hospital, Romania); S.S.
Mogoanta (Emergency County Hospital of Craiova, Romania); C.
Bolca (Marius Nasta’ National Institute of Pneumology,
Romania); S. Constantinoiu (St. Mary Clinical Hospital, Romania);
D. Sekhniaidze (Tyumen Regional Hospital, Russia); M. Bjelovic
(Department for Minimally Invasive Upper Digestive Surgery,
University Hospital for Digestive Surgery, Clinical Centre of
Serbia, Serbia); J.B.Y. So (National University Hospital, Singapore);
evski (University Hospital Maribor, Slovenia); C. Loureiro
G. Gac
(University Hospital of Basurto (Bilbao), Spain); M. Pera (Hospital
Universitario del Mar, Spain); A. Bianchi (Palma de Mallorca,
Spain); M. Moreno Gijón (Hospital Universitario Central de
Asturias, Spain); J. Martı́n Fernández (Hospital General
Universitario De Ciudad Real, Spain); M.S. Trugeda Carrera
(Hospital Universitario Marqués de Valdecilla, Spain); M. Vallve~ ora de Candelaria,
Bernal (Hospital Universitario Nuestra Sen
Spain); M.A. Cı́tores Pascual (Hospital Universitario Rı́o Hortega
de Valladolid, Spain); S. Elmahi (Shaab Teaching Hospital,
Sudan), I. Halldestam (University Hospital Linköping, Sweden); J.
Hedberg (Uppsala University Hospital, Sweden); S. Mönig (Geneva
University Hospital, Switzerland); S. Gutknecht (Triemli Hospital
Zurich, Switzerland); M. Tez (Ankara Numune Hospital, Turkey);
A. Guner (Karadeniz Technical University, Turkey); T.B. Tirnaksiz
(Hacettepe University Hospital, Turkey); E. Colak (University of
Health Sciences, Samsun Training and Research Hospital,
Turkey); B. Sevinç (Usak University Training and Research
Hospital, Turkey); A. Hindmarsh (Addenbrooke’s Hospital, UK); I.
Khan (Aintree University Hospital, UK); D. Khoo (Barking
Havering and Redbridge NHS Trust, UK); R. Byrom (Royal
Bournemouth Hospital, UK); J. Gokhale (Bradford Royal Infirmary,
UK); P. Wilkerson (University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation
Trust, UK); P. Jain (Castle Hill Hospital, UK); D. Chan (University
Hospital of Coventry, UK); K. Robertson (University Hospital
Crosshouse, UK); S. Iftikhar (Royal Derby Hospital, UK); R.
Skipworth (Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, UK); M. Forshaw (Glasgow
Royal Infirmary, UK); S. Higgs (Gloucester Royal Hospital, UK); J.
Gossage (Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals, UK); R. Nijjar
(Heartlands Hospital, UK); Y.K.S. Viswanath (James Cook
University Hospital, UK); P. Turner (Lancashire Teaching
Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK); S. Dexter (Leeds Teaching
Hospitals NHS Trust, UK); A. Boddy (University Hospitals of
Leicester NHS Trust, UK); W.H. Allum (Royal Marsden Hospital,
UK); S. Oglesby (Ninewells Hospital, UK); E. Cheong (Norfolk and
Norwich University Hospital, UK); D. Beardsmore (University
Hospital of North Midlands, UK); R. Vohra (Nottingham
University Hospital, UK); N. Maynard (Oxford University
Hospitals, UK); R. Berrisford (Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust, UK);
S. Mercer (Queen Alexandra Hospital, UK); S. Puig (Queen
Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham, UK); R. Melhado (Salford Royal
Foundation Trust, UK); C. Kelty (Sheffield Teaching Hospitals
NHS Foundation Trust, UK); T. Underwood (University Hospital
Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, UK); K. Dawas (University
College Hospital, UK); W. Lewis (University Hospital of Wales,
UK); A. Al-Bahrani (Watford General Hospital); G. Bryce
(University Hospital Wishaw, UK); M. Thomas (Mayo Clinic in
Florida, USA); A.T. Arndt (Rush University Medical Centre, USA);
F. Palazzo (Thomas Jefferson University, USA); R.A. Meguid
(University of Colorado Hospital, USA). J. Fergusson, E. Beenen, C.
Mosse, J. Salim (The Canberra Hospital, Australia); S. Cheah, T.
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Bekele (Ethiopia), A. Kechagias (Finland), I. Gockel (Germany), A.
Kennedy (Ireland), A. Da Roit (Italy), A. Bagajevas (Lithuania), J.S.
Azagra (Luxembourg), H.A. Mahendran (Malaysia), L. Mejı́aFernández (Mexico), B.P.L. Wijnhoven (The Netherlands), J. El
Kafsi (New Zealand), R.H. Sayyed (Pakistan), M. Sousa (Portugal),
A.S. Sampaio (Portugal), I. Negoi (Romania), R. Blanco (Spain), B.
Wallner (Sweden), P.M. Schneider (Switzerland), P.K. Hsu
(Taiwan), A. Isik (Turkey), S. Gananadha (The Canberra Hospital,
Australia); V. Wills (John Hunter Hospital, Australia); M. Devadas
(Nepean Hospital, Australia); C. Duong (Peter MacCallum Cancer
Centre, Australia); M. Talbot (St George Public and Private
Hospitals, Australia); M.W. Hii (St Vincent’s Hospital Melbourne,
Australia); R. Jacobs (Western Hospital, Victoria, Australia); N.A.
Andreollo (Unicamp University Hospital, Brazil); B. Johnston
(Saint John Regional Hospital, Canada); G. Darling (Toronto
General Hospital, University Health Network, Canada); A. IsazaRestrepo (Hospital Universitario Mayor Mederi-Universidad del
Rosario, Colombia); G. Rosero (Hospital San Ignacio-Universidad
Javeriana, Colombia); F. Arias- Amézquita (University Hospital
Fundacion Santafe de Bogota, Colombia); D. Raptis (University
Clinic of Erlangen, Germany); J. Gaedcke (Medical Unversity
Goettingen, Germany); D. Reim (Klinikum Rechts der Isar der TU
München, Germany); J. Izbicki (University Hospital Hamburg
Eppendorf, Germany); J.H. Egberts (University Hospital Kiel,
Germany); S. Dikinis (Aalborg University Hospital, Denmark);
D.W. Kjaer (Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark); M.H. Larsen
(Odense University Hospital, Denmark); M.P. Achiam
(Copenhagen University hospital Rigshospitalet, Denmark); J.
Saarnio (Oulu University Hospital, Finland); D. Theodorou
(Hippokration General Hospital University of Athens, Greece); T.
Liakakos (Laikon General Hospital, Greece); D.P. Korkolis (St.
Savvas Cancer Hospital, Greece); W.B. Robb (Beaumont Hospital,
Ireland); C. Collins (University Hospital Galway, Ireland); T.
Murphy (Mercy University Hospital, Ireland); J. Reynolds (St
James’s Hospital, Ireland); V. Tonini (St. Orsola Hospital–
University of Bologna, Italy); M. Migliore (Polyclinic Hospital
University of Catania, Italy); L. Bonavina (University of Milano,
Italy); M. Valmasoni (Padova University Hospital, Italy); R. Bardini
(Padova University Hospital, Italy); J. Weindelmayer (Verona
Borgo Trento Hospital, Italy); M. Terashima (Shizioka Cancer
Centre, Japan); R.E. White (Tenwek Hospital, Kenya); E.
Alghunaim (Chest Diseases Hospital, Kuwait); M. Elhadi (Tripoli,
Libya); A.M. Leon-Takahashi (National Cancer Institute, Mexico);
H. Medina-Franco (National Institute of Medical Science and
Nutrition Salvador Zubirán, Mexico); P.C. Lau (University Malaya
Medical Centre, Malaysia); K.E. Okonta (Carez Hospital &
University of Port-Harcourt Teaching Hospital, Nigeria); J.
Heisterkamp (Elisabeth-TweeSteden Ziekenhuis Hospital, The
Netherlands); C. Rosman (Radboudumc, The Netherlands); R. van
Hillegersberg (UMC Utrecht, The Netherlands); G. Beban
(Auckland City Hospital, New Zealand); R. Babor (Middlemore
Hospital, New Zealand); A. Gordon (Palmerston North Hospital,
New Zealand); J.I. Rossaak (Tauranga Hospital, Bay of Plenty
District Health Board, New Zealand); K.M.I. Pal (Aga Khan
University Hospital, Pakistan); A.U. Qureshi (Services Institute of
Medical Sciences, Pakistan); S.A. Naqi (Mayo Hospital, Pakistan);
A.A. Syed (Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital &
Research Centre Lahore, Pakistan); J. Barbosa (Centro Hospitalar
~ o Joa
~ o, Portugal); C.S. Vicente (Centro Hospitalar Lisboa
Sa
Central, Portugal); J. Leite (Coimbra University Hospital, Portugal);
J. Freire (Hospital Santa Maria, Portugal); R. Casaca (Instituto
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BJS, 2022, Vol. 00, No. 0
Lanschot, C. Cords (Erasmus University Medical Centre, The
Netherlands); W.A. Jansen, I. Martijnse, R. Matthijsen (ElisabethTweeSteden Ziekenhuis Hospital, The Netherlands); S.
Bouwense, B. Klarenbeek, M. Verstegen, F. van Workum
(Radboudumc, The Netherlands); J.P. Ruurda, A. van der Veen,
J.W. van den Berg (UMC Utrecht, The Netherlands); N. Evenett, P.
Johnston, R. Patel (Auckland City Hospital, New Zealand); A.
MacCormick (Middlemore Hospital, New Zealand); M. Young
(Palmerston North Hospital, New Zealand); B. Smith (Tauranga
Hospital, Bay of Plenty District Health Board, New Zealand); C.
Ekwunife (Carez Hospital & University of Port-Harcourt Teaching
Hospital, Nigeria); A.H. Memon, K. Shaikh, A. Wajid (Aga Khan
University Hospital, Pakistan); N. Khalil, M. Haris, Z.U. Mirza,
S.B.A. Qudus (Services Institute of Medical Sciences, Pakistan);
M.Z. Sarwar, A. Shehzadi, A. Raza, M.H. Jhanzaib (Mayo Hospital,
Pakistan); J. Farmanali, Z. Zakir (Patel Hospital, Pakistan); O.
Shakeel, I. Nasir, S. Khattak, M. Baig, M.A. Noor, H.H. Ahmed, A.
Naeem (Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital & Research
Centre Lahore, Pakistan); A.C. Pinho, R. da Silva (Centro
Hospitalar Lisboa Central, Portugal), A. Bernardes, J.C. Campos
(Coimbra University Hospital, Portugal); H. Matos, T. Braga
(Hospital Santa Maria, Portugal); C. Monteiro, P. Ramos, F. Cabral
(Instituto Português de Oncologia de Lisboa, Portugal); M.P.
Gomes, P.C. Martins, A.M. Correia, J.F. Videira (Instituto
Português de Oncologia do Porto, Portugal); C. Ciuce, R.
Drasovean, R. Apostu, C. Ciuce (University Emergency Cluj
County Hospital, Romania); S. Paitici, A.E. Racu, C.V. Obleaga
(Emergency County Hospital of Craiova, Romania); M. Beuran, B.
Stoica, C. Ciubotaru, V. Negoita (Emergency Hospital of
Bucharest, Romania); I. Cordos (Marius Nasta’ National Institute
of Pneumology, Romania); R.D. Birla, D. Predescu, P.A. Hoara, R.
Tomsa (St. Mary Clinical Hospital, Romania); V. Shneider, M.
Agasiev, I. Ganjara (Tyumen Regional Hospital, Russia); D.
, M. Veselinovi
(Department for Minimally
Gunjic
c, T. Babic
Invasive Upper Digestive Surgery, University Hospital for
Digestive Surgery, Clinical Centre of Serbia, Serbia); T.S. Chin, A.
Shabbir, G. Kim (National University Hospital, Singapore); A.
Crnjac, H. Samo (University Hospital Maribor, Slovenia); I. Dı́ez
del Val, S. Leturio (University Hospital of Basurto (Bilbao), Spain);
I. Dı́ez del Val, S. Leturio, J.M. Ramón, M. Dal Cero, S. Rifá, M. Rico
(Hospital Universitario del Mar, Spain); A. Pagan Pomar, J.A.
Martinez Corcoles (Palma de Mallorca, Spain); J.L. Rodicio
Miravalles, S.A. Pais, S.A. Turienzo, L.S. Alvarez (Hospital
Universitario Central de Asturias, Spain); P.V. Campos, A.G.
Rendo, S.S. Garcı́a, E.P.G. Santos (Hospital General Universitario
De Ciudad Real, Spain); E.T. Martı́nez, M.J. Fernández Dı́az, C.
Magadán Álvarez (Hospital Universitario Marqués de Valdecilla,
Spain); V. Concepción Martı́n, C. Dı́az López, A. Rosat Rodrigo, L.E.
~ ora de
Pérez Sánchez (Hospital Universitario Nuestra Sen
Candelaria, Spain); M. Bailón Cuadrado, C. Tinoco Carrasco, E.
Choolani Bhojwani, D.P. Sánchez (Hospital Universitario Rı́o
Hortega de Valladolid, Spain); M.E. Ahmed (Shaab Teaching
Hospital, Sudan); T. Dzhendov (University Hospital Linköping,
Sweden); F. Lindberg, M. Rutegård (Umeå University Hospital,
Sweden); M. Sundbom (Uppsala University Hospital, Sweden); C.
Mickael, N. Colucci (Geneva University Hospital, Switzerland); A.
Schnider (Triemli Hospital Zurich, Switzerland); S. Er (Ankara
Numune Hospital, Turkey); E. Kurnaz (Erzincan University
Hospital, Turkey); S. Turkyilmaz, A. Turkyilmaz, R. Yildirim, B.E.
Baki (Karadeniz Technical University, Turkey); N. Akkapulu
(Hacettepe University Hospital, Turkey); O. Karahan, N.
Damburaci (Usak University Training and Research Hospital,
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/bjsopen/article/5/6/zrab132/6509476 by guest on 18 January 2022
Wright, M.P. Cerdeira, P. McQuillan (John Hunter Hospital,
Australia); M. Richardson, H. Liem (Nepean Hospital, Australia); J.
Spillane, M. Yacob, F. Albadawi, T. Thorpe, A. Dingle, C. Cabalag
(Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Australia); K. Loi, O.M. Fisher
(St George Public and Private Hospitals, Australia); S. Ward, M.
Read, M. Johnson (St Vincent’s Hospital Melbourne, Australia); R.
Bassari, H. Bui (Western Hospital, Australia); I. Cecconello, R.A.A.
Sallum, J.R.M. da Rocha (Hospital das Clinicas, University of Sao
Paulo School of Medicine, Brazil); L.R. Lopes, V. Tercioti Jr, J.D.S.
Coelho, J.A.P. Ferrer (Unicamp University Hospital, Brazil); G.
Buduhan, L. Tan, S. Srinathan (Health Sciences Centre
(Winnipeg), Canada); P. Shea (Saint John Regional Hospital,
Canada); J. Yeung, F. Allison, P. Carroll (Toronto General Hospital,
University Health Network, Canada); F. Vargas-Barato, F.
Gonzalez, J. Ortega, L. Nino-Torres, T.C. Beltrán-Garcı́a (Hospital
Universitario Mayor Mederi-Universidad del Rosario, Colombia);
L. Castilla, M. Pineda (Hospital San Ignacio-Universidad
Javeriana, Colombia); A. Bastidas, J. Gómez-Mayorga, N. Cortés,
C. Cetares, S. Caceres, S. Duarte (University Hospital Fundacion
Santafe de Bogota, Colombia); A. Pazdro, M. Snajdauf, H. Faltova,
M. Sevcikova (Motol University Hospital, Prague, Czech Republic);
P.B. Mortensen (Aalborg University Hospital, Denmark); N.
Katballe, T. Ingemann, B. Morten, I. Kruhlikava (Aarhus
University Hospital, Denmark); A.P. Ainswort, N.M. Stilling, J.
Eckardt (Odense University Hospital, Denmark); J. Holm, M.
Thorsteinsson, M. Siemsen, B. Brandt (Copenhagen University
Hospital Rigshospitalet, Denmark); B. Nega, E. Teferra, A. Tizazu
(Tikur Anbessa Specialized Hospital, Ethiopa); J.S. Kauppila, V.
Koivukangas, S. Meriläinen (Oulu University Hospital, Finland); R.
Gruetzmann, C. Krautz, G. Weber, H. Golcher (University Clinic of
Erlangen, Germany); G. Emons, A. Azizian, M. Ebeling (Medical
University Goettingen, Germany); S. Niebisch, N. Kreuser, G.
Albanese, J. Hesse (Universitätklinium Leipzig, Germany); L.
Volovnik, U. Boecher (Klinikum Rechts der Isar der TU München,
Germany); M. Reeh (University Hospital Hamburg Eppendorf,
Germany); S. Triantafyllou (Hippokration General Hospital
University of Athens, Greece); D. Schizas, A. Michalinos, E. Baili,
M. Mpoura, A. Charalabopoulos (Laikon General Hospital,
Greece); D.K. Manatakis, D. Balalis (St. Savvas Cancer Hospital,
Greece); J. Bolger, C. Baban, A. Mastrosimone (Beaumont
Hospital, Ireland); O. McAnena, A. Quinn (University Hospital
Galway, Ireland); C.B. Ó Súilleabháin, M.M. Hennessy, I.
Ivanovski, H. Khizer (Mercy University Hospital, Ireland); N. Ravi,
N. Donlon (St James’s Hospital, Ireland); M. Cervellera, S. Vaccari,
S. Bianchini, L. Sartarelli (St. Orsola Hospital-University of
Bologna, Italy); E. Asti, D. Bernardi (University of Milano, IRCCS
Policlinico San Donato, Italy); S. Merigliano, L. Provenzano
(Padova University Hospital—Clinica Chirurgica, Italy); M. Scarpa,
L. Saadeh, B. Salmaso (Padova University Hospital-General
Surgery Department, Italy); G. De Manzoni, S. Giacopuzzi, R. La
Mendola, C.A. De Pasqual (Verona Borgo Trento Hospital, Italy);
Y. Tsubosa, M. Niihara, T. Irino, R. Makuuchi, K. Ishii (Shizioka
Cancer Centre, Japan); M. Mwachiro, A. Fekadu, A. Odera, E.
Mwachiro (Tenwek Hospital, Kenya); D. AlShehab (Chest Diseases
Hospital, Kuwait); H.A. Ahmed, A.O. Shebani, A. Elhadi, F.A.
Elnagar, H.F. Elnagar (Tripoli, Libya); S.T. Makkai-Popa (Centre
Hospitalier de Luxembourg, Luxembourg); L.F. Wong (University
Malaya Medical Centre, Malaysia); T. Yunrong, S. Thanninalai,
H.C. Aik, P.W. Soon, T.J. Huei (Hospital Sultanah Aminah,
Malaysia); H.N.L. Basave (National Cancer Institute, Mexico); R.
Cortés-González (Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Médicas y
Nutrición ‘Salvador Zubirán’, Mexico); S.M. Lagarde, J.J.B. van
Oesophago-Gastric Anastomosis Study Group (OGAA) on behalf of the West Midlands Research Collaborative
11
Supplementary material
Turkey); R. Hardwick, P. Safranek, V. Sujendran, J. Bennett, Z.
Afzal (Addenbrooke’s Hospital, UK); M. Shrotri, B. Chan, K.
Exarchou, T. Gilbert (Aintree University Hospital, UK); T.
Amalesh, D. Mukherjee, S. Mukherjee, T.H. Wiggins (Barking
Havering and Redbridge NHS Trust, UK); R. Kennedy, S. McCain,
A. Harris, G. Dobson (Belfast City Hospital, UK); N. Davies, I.
Wilson, D. Mayo, D. Bennett (Royal Bournemouth Hospital, UK);
R. Young, P. Manby (Bradford Royal Infirmary, UK); N. Blencowe,
M. Schiller, B. Byrne (University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation
Trust, UK); D. Mitton, V. Wong, A. Elshaer, M. Cowen (Castle Hill
Hospital, UK); V. Menon, L.C. Tan, E. McLaughlin, R. Koshy
(University Hospital of Coventry, UK); C. Sharp (University
Hospital Crosshouse, UK); H. Brewer, N. Das, M. Cox, W. Al
Khyatt, D. Worku (Royal Derby Hospital, UK); R. Iqbal, L. Walls, R.
McGregor (Edinburgh Royal Infirmary, UK); G. Fullarton, A.
Macdonald, C. MacKay, C. Craig (Glasgow Royal Infirmary, UK); S.
Dwerryhouse, S. Hornby, S. Jaunoo, M. Wadley (Gloucester Royal
Hospital, UK); C. Baker, M. Saad, M. Kelly, A. Davies, F. Di Maggio
(Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals, UK); S. McKay, P. Mistry, R.
Singhal, O. Tucker, S. Kapoulas, S. Powell-Brett (Heartlands
Hospital, UK); P. Davis, G. Bromley, L. Watson (James Cook
University Hospital, UK); R. Verma, J. Ward, V. Shetty, C. Ball, K.
Pursnani (Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust,
UK); A. Sarela, H. Sue Ling, S. Mehta, J. Hayden, N. To (Leeds
Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, UK); T. Palser, D. Hunter, K.
Supramaniam, Z. Butt, A. Ahmed (University Hospitals of
Leicester NHS Trust, UK); S. Kumar, A. Chaudry, O. Moussa
(Royal Marsden Hospital, UK); A. Kordzadeh, B. Lorenzi (Mid and
South Essex NHS Foundation Trust, UK). M. Wilson, P. Patil, I.
Noaman (Ninewells Hospital, UK); J. Willem (Norfolk and
Norwich University Hospital); G. Bouras, R. Evans, M. Singh, H.
Warrilow, A. Ahmad (University Hospital of North Midlands, UK);
N. Tewari, F. Yanni, J. Couch, E. Theophilidou, J.J. Reilly, P. Singh
(Nottingham University Hospital, UK); G. van Boxel, K. Akbari, D.
Zanotti, B. Sgromo (Oxford University Hospitals, UK); G. Sanders,
T. Wheatley, A. Ariyarathenam, A. Reece-Smith, L. Humphreys
(Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust, UK); C. Choh, N. Carter, B.
Knight, P. Pucher (Queen Alexandra Hospital, UK); A. Athanasiou,
I. Mohamed, B. Tan, M. Abdulrahman (Queen Elizabeth Hospital
Birmingham, UK); J. Vickers, K. Akhtar, R. Chaparala, R. Brown,
M.M.A. Alasmar (Salford Royal Foundation Trust, UK); R.
Ackroyd, K. Patel, A. Tamhankar, A. Wyman (Sheffield Teaching
Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK); R. Walker, B. Grace
(University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, UK); N.
Abbassi, N. Slim, L. Ioannidi (University College Hospital, UK); G.
Blackshaw, T. Havard, X. Escofet, A. Powell (University Hospital
of Wales, UK); A. Owera, F. Rashid, P. Jambulingam, J.
Padickakudi (Watford General Hospital, UK); H. Ben-Younes, K.
McCormack (University Hospital Wishaw, UK); I.A. Makey (Mayo
Clinic in Florida, USA); M.K. Karush, C.W. Seder, M.J. Liptay, G.
Chmielewski (Rush University Medical Centre, USA); E.L. Rosato,
A.C. Berger, R. Zheng, E. Okolo (Thomas Jefferson University,
USA); A. Singh, C.D. Scott, M.J. Weyant, J.D. Mitchell (University of
Colorado Hospital, USA).
13.
Acknowledgements
14.
Supplementary material is available at BJS Open online.
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