inpatient_neurosurgical_mortality

Inpatient Neurosurgical Mortality

Neurosurgical inpatient mortality varies depending on patient characteristics, pathology, and surgical context.

  • General neurosurgical admissions: 2.7 % – 4.5 %
  • Adult elective admissions (≥18 years): ~1.95 % during stay
  • 30-day post-discharge mortality: +2.5 % (approx.)

Study: US national database (2016–2020, >14,000 patients age ≥40)

  • Surgical group: 3.6 % in-hospital mortality
  • Medical (non-surgical): 10.9 % in-hospital mortality
  • Surgery improved survival but was associated with higher complication rates.
  • Elderly patients (≥65 years): ~4 % inpatient mortality
  • Frailty impact: ~63 % increased risk of death (OR 1.63)
    • Associated with:
      1. More postoperative complications
      2. Longer length of stay
      3. Higher discharge to rehabilitation or long-term care
  • Severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) with ICP monitoring:
    1. ~29.3 % in-hospital mortality
    2. 69 % of deaths due to primary brain injury
  • Neurosurgical healthcare-associated infections:
    1. ~11 % inpatient mortality
Clinical Scenario Inpatient Mortality Rate
General neurosurgical admissions 2.7 – 4.5 %
Elective adult admissions ~1.95 %
Chronic subdural hematoma (surgical) 3.6 %
Chronic subdural hematoma (non-surgical) 10.9 %
Elderly patients (≥65) ~4 %
Severe TBI with ICP monitoring ~29.3 %
Neurosurgical infections ~11 %
  • Procedure type (e.g., craniotomy, TBI, cSDH)
  • Patient-specific risks: Age, frailty, comorbidities
  • Medical complications: Especially infections
  • Care setting: Neurocritical care units show better outcomes
  • Most neurosurgical patients have low inpatient mortality (<4 %)
  • Non-operative management (e.g., cSDH) or acute TBI increases risk substantially
  • Frailty is a powerful predictor, often more than age alone
  • In-hospital death is only part of total perioperative risk – 30-day mortality adds significant burden

In a cross‑sectional analysis, Kamp et al. from:

  • Brandenburg Medical School Theodor Fontane, Neuruppin
  • Immanuel Clinic Rüdersdorf (Palliative and Neuropalliative Care)
  • University Hospitals in Heidelberg, Bonn, Jena, Essen
  • European Radiosurgery Center Munich
  • Witten/Herdecke University
  • St. Barbara‑Klinik Hamm‑Heessen

published in the Neurosurgical Review Journal, analyzed 2023 in-hospital neurosurgical mortality using nationwide billing data in Germany.

  • Total cases: 222,158
  • In-hospital deaths: 8,338
  • Overall mortality: 3.8 %
  • Sex disparity: Men 4.2 % vs Women 3.3 %
  • High mortality in: Traumatic and hemorrhagic conditions
  • Surgical intervention mortality range: 1–9 %

Study offers a national benchmark but relies entirely on administrative data.


  • Methodology fragility:

Reliance on §21 InEK billing data means:

  1. No clinical validation
  2. No severity or comorbidity adjustment
  3. No timing of events
  • Misinterpretation danger:

Raw mortality rates without risk stratification are misleading.

  The reported sex difference may reflect unadjusted confounders.
  • Incremental novelty:

Similar national audits (UK, US) already exist.

  This adds little beyond local replication.
  • Discussion gaps:

Authors admit no causal inference, but still present data as benchmarks.

  They ignore biases like repeated admissions or misclassification.
  • Logical leaps:

Quoting procedure-specific mortality (e.g. 9 % for vascular cases)

  without clinical context may unfairly penalize high-risk centers.
  • Overstated conclusions:

Suggesting policy relevance or clinical utility is unconvincing

  without proper risk modeling.

Flawed epidemiological exercise. Too crude for benchmarking; lacks clinical depth; no actionable utility.

Do not use raw mortality data from this study to compare providers. Instead, push for risk-adjusted, registry-based outcome tracking.

An incomplete administrative snapshot. Inadequate for policy, benchmarking, or clinical decision-making.

2/10 — Large dataset undermined by methodological and interpretative weakness.

Kamp MA, Jungk C, Schneider M, Fehler G, Santacroce A, Dinc N, Ebner FH, von Sass C, et al. **Inpatient neurosurgical mortality in Germany: a comprehensive analysis of 2023 in‑hospital data.** ''Neurosurgical Review''. 2025 Jun 23;48(1):525. doi:10.1007/s10143-025-03664-1. PMID:40545502. Received: 10 Feb 2025; Revised: 19 May 2025; Accepted: 8 Jun 2025. Corresponding author: Marcel A. Kamp <marcelalexander.kamp@gmail.com>.

  • inpatient_neurosurgical_mortality.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/24 22:15
  • by administrador