|
| A Guide to Reading and Understanding the Center-Specific
Reports (CSRs) Prepared by the Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients
(SRTR) |
|
| Center:
Baptist Memorial Hospital |
| Organ:
HL: Heart/Lung |
| |
| Overview: |
These Center-Specific Reports contain a wide range of useful information
about transplant programs operating in the United States. The information
includes many features of the transplant program, such as the number of
transplants performed in recent years, waiting time and waiting list
outcomes, and post-transplant experience of patients served by this center.
The statistics are arranged to allow comparisons to national averages, as
well as to the experience for similar patients at other centers in the
country. This report is based largely on data submitted by this transplant
center for patients on the waiting list and those transplanted within the
last five years. |
|
Table 1 provides a picture of the volume and type of waiting list and
transplant activity at this center. Baptist Memorial Hospital had no patients
on the waiting list |
Waiting times for transplantation differ from from facility to facility and
also from person to person, depending upon many factors,. One quarter of the
patients listed at this center had received a transplant as of 2.1 months
after being placed on the waiting list; in the nation it took 18.7 months to
reach the same fraction of patients transplanted. The other three quarters of
the patients were either still waiting or removed from the waiting list for
reasons including death. Tables 3 through 5, which focus on other
characteristics of waiting list and waiting time (including risk-adjusted
comparisons) are discussed in the details section below. |
No survival data are shown for Baptist Memorial Hospital since this center
did not perform any transplants that were the first cadaveric transplant for a patient during the periods of our patient survival analyses. |
Specific circumstances at each center may affect many of the measures
reported in these reports. Frequently, staff from transplant programs make
public comments regarding these reports, made available in the comments page.
We encourage all readers of these reports to consider these comments and to
contact the program directly for further information. |
|
|
Table Details: |
The above overview provides most readers with a quick look at some of the
statistics that help describe a transplant program. The following section,
for the more interested reader, provides a more detailed accounting of each
table and how figures are defined and calculated. |
|
Tables 1 through 6 focus on characteristics of the waiting list process at
this center. Table 1 provides an overview of the waiting list activity at
this center: not just the size of the waiting list at a given point in time,
but also how many people have moved on to and off of this waiting list, and
for what reasons. This table is not produced if there is no waiting list
activity during this period. |
The waiting time at a given transplant center is affected by many factors, including the medical condition and characteristics of the patients listed
with this center (Table 2), the availability of organs in the Donation
Service Area served by the OPO, and decisions by medical professionals and other patients about organ acceptance. Some of the variability in waiting
time may be accounted for by local availability of organs, in which case
other centers in the Donation Service Area served by Mid-South Transplant Foundation may have similar waiting times.
|
Tables 3 through 6 provide different measures of looking at waiting list
outcomes. Table 3 shows a 'risk-adjusted' comparison of two outcomes from the
waiting list: transplant rate and death rate. For some organs, an 'expected'
rate is not calculated because the characteristics influencing the expected
rate are not well known. |
These waiting list rates are measured as the number of transplants (or
deaths) per year that any patient spends on the waiting list. It is possible
for these rates to be above 1, as would be the case if 2 patients each spent
3 months on the waiting list, and one received a transplant: 1 transplant
divided by .5 year = transplant rate of 2. |
While Table 3 provides a waiting list outcome rate that allows easy
comparison of risk-adjusted outcomes, statistics from tables 4 through 6 may
be more interpretable at a patient level. Table 4 answers the questions:
'What has been the outcome for patients at this center 6 months after being
placed on the waiting list? What about at 12 or 18 months?' The table also
examines post-transplant outcomes: at 12 months, for example, the table tells
if the patient is still on the waiting list, was transplanted and is still
alive, or died after transplant. |
Table 5 provides another way to look at how quickly patients receive
transplants at this center, this time looking at many different kinds of
patients. At this center, 0.0 percent of patients placed on the heart-lung
waiting list had received transplants as of 30 days after being placed on the
waiting list. Those not transplanted, the other 100.0 percent, were either
still waiting or removed from the waiting list for reasons including death.
At one year after placement on the waiting list, 50.0 percent of patients at
this center had been transplanted; this figure was 20.4 for all the centers
in the nation. The table also shows similar figures for subgroups of
patients, such as by age, disease, or medical urgency, allowing the reader to
see if specific groups of patients have experienced longer waiting times. |
Table 6 shows the time it takes for a given percentage of patients at this
facility to receive a transplant. This is the 'time-to-transplant' among all
wait-listed patients, including those who never receive a transplant. One
quarter of the patients placed on the waiting list at this center had
received a transplant as of 2.1 months after listing; in the nation it took
18.7 months to reach the same fraction. The other three quarters of the
patients were either still waiting or removed from the waiting list, for
reasons including death. (Another common statistic, 'median waiting time,'
differs in that it is often calculated only among patients who actually
received a transplant. The two are often correlated, but different in
magnitude. While median waiting time reflects time waiting among successful
candidates, time-to-transplant incorporates a measure of the probablility of
success in receiving an organ.) |
The remainder of the tables, 7 through 11, focus on transplants performed at
Baptist Memorial Hospital and their outcomes. Tables 7-9 describe the characteristics of transplant
recipients, donors, and operations at this center. This center performed no
cadaveric heart-lung transplants in the last year (01/01/2002-12/31/2002), so
these tables are not produced. |
Tables 10 and 11 show post-transplant outcomes. Table 10 shows the survival
experience of grafts (transplants) in patients transplanted by this center.
Table 11 shows the survival experience of these patients themselves. These
may be different because a patient may continue survival after a graft fails through means such as a new transplant, or, for kidney patients, dialysis.
Each survival number measures the percentage of patients who have a
functioning graft (Table 10) or who are alive (Table 11) at 1 month, 1 year, and 3 years after transplant. |
For some organs, an 'expected' survival is not calculated because the
characteristics influencing expected survival are not well known. |
This center did not perform any transplants that were the first cadaveric
transplant for a patient during the periods of our patient survival analyses.
|
|
|
|
|
|