Abstract

BackgroundAmong various treatment options for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), surgical therapy is the most invasive. As Switzerland has the highest transurethral prostatectomy rate among OECD countries, we assessed the regional variation in prostate surgery for BPH and explored potential determinants of variation.MethodsWe conducted a population-based analysis using discharge data for men aged ≥40 years with transurethral or simple prostatectomy from all Swiss hospitals during 2013–2018. After excluding patients with genitourinary/prostate cancer, we derived hospital service areas (HSAs) by analyzing patient flows. We calculated age-standardized mean procedure rates and variation indices (extremal quotient [EQ] and systematic component of variation [SCV]). We estimated the reduction in variance across HSAs of prostatectomy rates in multilevel regression models, with incremental adjustment for age, regional cultural and socioeconomic factors, disease burden, density of urologists, and the time since urologists’ graduation.ResultsOverall, 44,253 prostatectomies (42,710 transurethral and 1543 simple) from 44 HSAs were analyzed. The mean age-standardized prostate surgery rate was 314 (range 166–500) per 100,000 men aged ≥40 years per year. The EQ was 3.01 and the SCV 5.53, indicating a high regional variation. In multivariate models, men aged 75–79 years had an 11.6-fold higher prostatectomy rate than those aged 50–54 years. French/Italian language areas had a 21% lower rate than Swiss German speaking areas. Socioeconomic factors, disease burden, and density of urologist/time since graduation were not associated with prostatectomy rates. After full adjustment, 80% of the variance in prostate surgery across HSAs remained unexplained.ConclusionWe found a remarkably high regional variation in prostate surgery rates for BPH within Switzerland.

Highlights

  • Among various treatment options for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), surgical therapy is the most invasive

  • As Switzerland has the highest transurethral prostatectomy rate among Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries, we assessed the regional variation in prostate surgery for BPH and explored potential determinants of variation

  • Socioeconomic factors, disease burden, and density of urologist/time since graduation were not associated with prostatectomy

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to assess regional variations in prostatectomy rates using Swiss national data and to determine whether demographic, cultural, socioeconomic, health, and supply factors explain such variation

Methods
Results
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Conclusion

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