Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Caroline E. Reinke is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Caroline E. Reinke.


Annals of Surgery | 2012

Medical and financial risks associated with surgery in the elderly obese.

Jeffrey H. Silber; Paul R. Rosenbaum; Rachel R. Kelz; Caroline E. Reinke; Mark D. Neuman; Richard N. Ross; Orit Even-Shoshan; Guy David; Philip A. Saynisch; Fabienne A. Kyle; Dale W. Bratzler; Lee A. Fleisher

Objective: To study the medical and financial outcomes associated with surgery in elderly obese patients and to ask if obesity itself influences outcomes above and beyond the effects from comorbidities that are known to be associated with obesity. Background: Obesity is a surgical risk factor not present in Medicares risk adjustment or payment algorithms, as BMI is not collected in administrative claims. Methods: A total of 2045 severely or morbidly obese patients (BMI ≥ 35 kg/m2, aged between 65 and 80 years) selected from 15,914 elderly patients in 47 hospitals undergoing hip and knee surgery, colectomy, and thoracotomy were matched to 2 sets of 2045 nonobese patients (BMI = 20–30 kg/m2). A “limited match” controlled for age, sex, race, procedure, and hospital. A “complete match” also controlled for 30 additional factors such as diabetes and admission clinical data from chart abstraction. Results: Mean BMI in the obese patients was 40 kg/m2 compared with 26 kg/m2 in the nonobese. In the complete match, obese patients displayed increased odds of wound infection: OR (odds ratio) = 1.64 (95% CI: 1.21, 2.21); renal dysfunction: OR = 2.05 (1.39, 3.05); urinary tract infection: OR = 1.55 (1.24, 1.94); hypotension: OR = 1.38 (1.07, 1.80); respiratory events: OR = 1.44 (1.19, 1.75); 30-day readmission: OR = 1.38 (1.08, 1.77); and a 12% longer length of stay (8%, 17%). Provider costs were 10% (7%, 12%) greater in obese than in nonobese patients, whereas Medicare payments increased only 3% (2%, 5%). Findings were similar in the limited match. Conclusions: Obesity increases the risks and costs of surgery. Better approaches are needed to reduce these risks. Furthermore, to avoid incentives to underserve this population, Medicare should consider incorporating incremental costs of caring for obese patients into payment policy and include obesity in severity adjustment models.


Cancer | 2013

Trends in immediate breast reconstruction across insurance groups after enactment of breast cancer legislation.

Rachel L. Yang; Andrew S. Newman; Ines C. Lin; Caroline E. Reinke; Giorgos C. Karakousis; Brian J. Czerniecki; Liza C. Wu; Rachel R. Kelz

To improve access to breast reconstruction for mastectomy patients, the United States enacted the Womens Health and Cancer Rights Act in January of 1999. The objective of the current study was to evaluate the impact of this legislation on patients with different insurance plans.


Annals of Surgery | 2013

Acute Kidney Injury, Renal Function, and the Elderly Obese Surgical Patient: A Matched Case-Control Study

Rachel R. Kelz; Caroline E. Reinke; José R. Zubizarreta; Min Wang; Philip A. Saynisch; Orit Even-Shoshan; Peter P. Reese; Lee A. Fleisher; Jeffrey H. Silber

Objective: To investigate the association between obesity and perioperative acute kidney injury (AKI), controlling for preoperative kidney dysfunction. Background: More than 30% of patients older than 60 years are obese and, therefore, at risk for kidney disease. Postoperative AKI is a significant problem. Methods: We performed a matched case-control study of patients enrolled in the Obesity and Surgical Outcomes Study, using data of Medicare claims enriched with detailed chart review. Each AKI patient was matched with a non-AKI control similar in procedure type, age, sex, race, emergency status, transfer status, baseline estimated glomerular filtration rate, admission APACHE score, and the risk of death score with fine balance on hospitals. Results: We identified 514 AKI cases and 694 control patients. Of the cases, 180 (35%) followed orthopedic procedures and 334 (65%) followed colon or thoracic surgery. After matching, obese patients undergoing a surgical procedure demonstrated a 65% increase in odds of AKI within 30 days from admission (odds ratio = 1.65, P < 0.005) when compared with the nonobese patients. After adjustment for potential confounders, the odds of postoperative AKI remained elevated in the elderly obese (odds ratio = 1.68, P = 0.01.) Conclusions: Obesity is an independent risk factor for postoperative AKI in patients older than 65 years. Efforts to optimize kidney function preoperatively should be employed in this at-risk population along with keen monitoring and maintenance of intraoperative hemodynamics. When subtle reductions in urine output or a rising creatinine are observed postoperatively, timely clinical investigation is warranted to maximize renal recovery.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2013

American College of Surgeons NSQIP: quality in-training initiative pilot study.

Morgan M. Sellers; Caroline E. Reinke; Susan Kreider; Chelsey Meise; Kara Nelis; Anita Volpe; Nancy Anzlovar; Clifford Y. Ko; Rachel R. Kelz

BACKGROUND Clinical outcomes data are playing an increasingly important role in medical decision-making, reimbursement, and provider evaluation, but there are no documented programs that provide outcomes data to surgical residents as part of a structured curriculum. Our objectives were to develop a national collaborative of training programs to unify the efforts between quality and education personnel and demonstrate the feasibility of generating customized reports of patient outcomes for use in surgical education. STUDY DESIGN The pool of potential hospitals was evaluated by comparing ACS NSQIP participants with the roster of clinical sites for general surgery residency programs maintained by FREIDA Online. A program and user guide was developed to generate custom reports based on institutional data, and a voluntary pilot was conducted, consisting of initial development, implementation, and feedback stages. Programs that successfully completed installation and report generation were queried for feedback on time and resources used. RESULTS Of 245 general surgery residency programs, 47% had a NSQIP-affiliated sponsor institution, and an additional 31% had at least 1 NSQIP-affiliated participant institution. Sixty general surgery residency programs have expressed interest in collaboration. Seventeen pilot sites completed training and installation, and were able to independently generate custom reports. The response rate for the post-report survey was 50%. Participants reported that training and installation typically required one 2-hour phone call, and that total time devoted to the project was less than 8 hours. CONCLUSIONS Collaboration between educators and quality improvement personnel from a diverse group of organizations to integrate outcomes data into surgical education is feasible. Obtaining resident and team reports from ACS NSQIP can be done with minimal effort. Future efforts will be aimed at developing a national data-centered curriculum for general surgery programs.


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2013

Quality In-Training Initiative—A Solution to the Need for Education in Quality Improvement: Results from a Survey of Program Directors

Rachel R. Kelz; Morgan M. Sellers; Caroline E. Reinke; Rachel L. Medbery; Jon B. Morris; Clifford Y. Ko

BACKGROUND The Next Accreditation System and the Clinical Learning Environment Review Program will emphasize practice-based learning and improvement and systems-based practice. We present the results of a survey of general surgery program directors to characterize the current state of quality improvement in graduate surgical education and introduce the Quality In-Training Initiative (QITI). STUDY DESIGN In 2012, a 20-item survey was distributed to 118 surgical residency program directors from ACS NSQIP-affiliated hospitals. The survey content was developed in collaboration with the QITI to identify program director opinions regarding education in practice-based learning and improvement and systems-based practice, to investigate the status of quality improvement education in their respective programs, and to quantify the extent of resident participation in quality improvement. RESULTS There was a 57% response rate. Eighty-five percent of program directors (n = 57) reported that education in quality improvement is essential to future professional work in the field of surgery. Only 28% (n = 18) of programs reported that at least 50% of their residents track and analyze their patient outcomes, compare them with norms/benchmarks/published standards, and identify opportunities to make practice improvements. CONCLUSIONS Program directors recognize the importance of quality improvement efforts in surgical practice. Subpar participation in basic practice-based learning and improvement activities at the resident level reflects the need for support of these educational goals. The QITI will facilitate programmatic compliance with goals for quality improvement education.


Surgery | 2012

Obesity and readmission in elderly surgical patients.

Caroline E. Reinke; Rachel R. Kelz; José R. Zubizarreta; Lanyu Mi; Philip A. Saynisch; Fabienne A. Kyle; Orit Even-Shoshan; Lee A. Fleisher; Jeffrey H. Silber

BACKGROUND Reducing readmissions has become a focus in efforts by Medicare to improve health care quality and reduce costs. This study aimed to determine whether causes for readmission differed between obese and nonobese patients, possibly allowing for targeted interventions. METHODS A matched case control study of Medicare patients admitted between 2002 and 2006 who were readmitted after hip or knee surgery, colectomy, or thoracotomy was performed. Patients were matched exactly for procedure, while also balancing on hospital, age, and sex. Conditional logistic regression was used to study the odds of readmission for very obese cases (body mass index >35 kg/m2) versus normal weight patients (body mass index of 20-30 kg/m2) after also controlling for race, transfer-in and emergency status, and comorbidities. RESULTS Among 15,914 patient admissions, we identified 1,380 readmitted patients and 2,760 controls. The risk of readmission was increased for obese compared to nonobese patients both before and after controlling for comorbidities (before: odds ratio, 1.35; P = .003; after: odds ratio, 1.25; P = .04). Reasons for readmission varied by procedure but were not different by body mass index category. CONCLUSION Obese patients have an increased risk of readmission, yet the reasons for readmission in obese patients appear to be similar to those for nonobese patients, suggesting that improved postdischarge management for the obese cannot focus on a few specific causes of readmission but must instead provide a broad range of interventions.


The American Statistician | 2011

Matching for Several Sparse Nominal Variables in a Case-Control Study of Readmission Following Surgery.

José R. Zubizarreta; Caroline E. Reinke; Rachel R. Kelz; Jeffrey H. Silber; Paul R. Rosenbaum

Matching for several nominal covariates with many levels has usually been thought to be difficult because these covariates combine to form an enormous number of interaction categories with few if any people in most such categories. Moreover, because nominal variables are not ordered, there is often no notion of a “close substitute” when an exact match is unavailable. In a case-control study of the risk factors for readmission within 30 days of surgery in the Medicare population, we wished to match for 47 hospitals, 15 surgical procedures grouped or nested within 5 procedure groups, two genders, or 47 × 15 × 2 = 1410 categories. In addition, we wished to match as closely as possible for the continuous variable age (65–80 years). There were 1380 readmitted patients or cases. A fractional factorial experiment may balance main effects and low-order interactions without achieving balance for high-order interactions. In an analogous fashion, we balance certain main effects and low-order interactions among the covariates; moreover, we use as many exactly matched pairs as possible. This is done by creating a match that is exact for several variables, with a close match for age, and both a “near-exact match” and a “finely balanced match” for another nominal variable, in this case a 47 × 5 = 235 category variable representing the interaction of the 47 hospitals and the five surgical procedure groups. The method is easily implemented in R.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2013

Comparison of anastomotic leak rate after colorectal surgery using different databases.

Caroline E. Reinke; Shayna Showalter; Najjia N. Mahmoud; Rachel R. Kelz

BACKGROUND: Anastomotic leaks are one of the most important clinical outcomes after colorectal anastomosis. Because of the lack of measurement of this outcome in databases, research has been limited by the need to perform chart review. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to evaluate the ability of 2 sources, an administrative database and a clinical registry, to identify anastomotic leaks. DESIGN AND SETTING: A retrospective cohort study of patients undergoing colorectal procedures at an academic medical center over a 1-year period was performed. PATIENTS: International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification procedure codes were used to identify patients, and chart review of all patient records was performed. Risk factors for anastomotic leak were recorded along with the presence or absence of anastomotic leak. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Patients were identified as having a leak in the University HealthSystem Consortium (administrative database) by procedure codes and in the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (clinical registry) if they had a postoperative organ space surgical site infection. The administrative and clinical data sources were compared with the use of sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value for anatomotic leak. RESULTS: We identified 424 patients; 66 that did not have an anastomosis and 6 that lacked outpatient follow-up were excluded. Anastomotic leak was identified by chart review in 24 patients (6.8%). The clinical registry had the highest specificity (97%) and sensitivity (8%). LIMITATIONS: Because of the lack of a definition for anastomotic leak in either the administrative database or clinical registry, logical proxies were used. CONCLUSIONS: Although the clinical registry had higher sensitivity and specificity for anastomotic leak, both databases had low sensitivity. Future research on anastomotic leaks would benefit greatly from a uniform definition and recording of this outcome in national databases.


Transplantation | 2012

Tertiary hyperparathyroidism in kidney transplant recipients: characteristics of patients selected for different treatment strategies.

Rachel L. Yang; Kate Freeman; Caroline E. Reinke; Douglas L. Fraker; Giorgos C. Karakousis; Rachel R. Kelz; Alden Doyle

Background Several treatment options exist for kidney transplant patients with tertiary hyperparathyroidism. However, the decision to endorse observation (OBS), medical therapy, or parathyroidectomy (PTX) remains controversial. Methods We performed a retrospective cohort study of kidney transplant patients with tertiary hyperparathyroidism at a single institution over a 7-year period. Patients were classified by treatment mode: OBS, medical therapy with cinacalcet (CIN), or PTX. Descriptive statistics were performed. Serum calcium levels and change in serum creatinine level were compared using analysis of variance with comparisons between individual groups using the Student’s t test with a Bonferroni correction. Time to treatment was compared between CIN and PTX groups using the Student’s t test. Complication rates were compared using the Fisher exact test. Results We identified 83 patients: 52 were treated by OBS; 13 were treated with CIN, and 18 underwent PTX. Six weeks after treatment, PTX resulted in lower serum calcium level (9.28 mg/dL) compared with CIN (10.20 mg/dL) (P<0.01). There was no difference in the change in serum creatinine level 1 year after treatment initiation (P=0.98). Time to treatment was shorter (1.7 vs. 3.3 years, P<0.01), and the highest pretreatment calcium level was higher (12.2 vs. 11.7 mg/dL, P<0.01) in patients treated with PTX compared with CIN. Complication rates differed by treatment group (P<0.01). A quarter of OBS patients showed persistent hypercalcemic symptoms, compared with only 7.7% in the CIN group and 0% in the PTX group (P<0.01). Conclusions PTX led to a greater reduction in serum calcium level and lower chance of persistent hypercalcemic symptoms, without any appreciable harm to the kidney allograft.


Surgery | 2012

Incidence of venous thromboembolism in patients undergoing surgical treatment for malignancy by type of neoplasm: An analysis of ACS-NSQIP data from 2005 to 2010

Caroline E. Reinke; Giorgos C. Karakousis; Rachel A. Hadler; Jeffrey A. Drebin; Douglas L. Fraker; Rachel R. Kelz

INTRODUCTION This study investigates the incidence, relative risk, and adjusted odds ratio of venous thromboembolism (VTE) among patients with malignant neoplasms compared with those with benign neoplasms, as well as the incidence of outpatient VTE diagnosis. METHODS We performed a retrospective cohort study of patients in the ACS-NSQIP database from 2005 to 2010 with a postoperative diagnosis of neoplasm. The incidence of 30-day VTE, post-VTE death, the incidence of postdischarge VTE diagnosis, and the relative risk of postoperative VTE was calculated by cancer site. Logistic regression was used to calculate an independent odds ratio for each neoplasm site, adjusting for age, gender, body mass index, and operative time. RESULTS Of 208,200 patients, 159,752 had a malignant diagnosis of the sites of interest and 48,448 had benign/carcinoma in situ neoplasms. The incidence, relative risk, and odds ratio of 30-day VTE varied substantially by site of malignancy. The absolute incidence of outpatient VTE diagnosis varied by site and percent of VTE diagnosed as an outpatient was found to increase over time. CONCLUSION Recommendations for VTE prophylaxis and duration of VTE prophylaxis for patients undergoing operations may benefit from tailoring to the specific type of malignancy. The increasing percentage of VTE events diagnosed as an outpatient may impact hospitals substantially as financial penalties for readmission are enacted.

Collaboration


Dive into the Caroline E. Reinke's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rachel R. Kelz

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giorgos C. Karakousis

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Douglas L. Fraker

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel N. Holena

Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lee A. Fleisher

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Orit Even-Shoshan

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chelsey Meise

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeffrey H. Silber

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rachel L. Yang

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge