Title: Improvement of best practice in
1- Improvement of best practice in
- early breast cancer
- Actionable surgeon and hospital factors
- Marjan Gort
- Manda Broekhuis, Renée Otter, Jacob Wijngaard,
Niek Klazinga - Comprehensive Cancer Centre North Netherlands
- Faculty of Management and Organization,
University of Groningen - UKACR NCR Conference 2006
2Study background
- Despite guidelines, large variation between
hospitals in surgical treatment of breast cancer
patients (Baldwin, 2004) - Variation remains while adjusting for patient
characteristics (Schaapveld et al, 20051
Siesling et al, 20052) - Other causes for variation surgeon and hospital?
- 1 Guideline adherence for early breast cancer
before and after introduction of the sentinel
node biopsy. Br J Cancer, 2005 - 2 Trends and variation in breast conserving
surgery in the southeast and east of the
Netherlands over the period 1990-2002, NTvG, 2005
3Study objectives
- Identify actionable elements for improving best
practice for breast cancer - Relative effects of patient, surgeon and hospital
factors on surgical treatment - in early breast cancer
- CCCN region
- 2.1 million inhabitants
- 17 hospitals
- 1800 breast cancer patients/year
4Methods
- Patient selection
- 2929 early staged breast cancer patients (cT1/
cT2) - 89 different surgeons
- 16 hospitals (university hospital excluded) CCCN
region - Jan 1998 Jan 2002
- Data sources
- Cancer Registry CCCN
- 2nd visitatie
- Medical specialist registry
- Patient, surgeon and hospital variables in
- multilevel logistic regression
5Methods
- Surgical treatment
- Breast conserving surgery (BCS) ? best practice
for early stage - Modified radical mastectomy (MRM)
- Patient variables
- Age, tumour size (cT), mode of detection, period
of diagnosis - Surgeon variables
- Volume (lt30/ 30), member of breast cancer
working group, years in practice, quality of
nodal staging (Kingsmore, 2005) - Hospital variables
- Volume (lt100/ 100), teaching status, trial
oriented, - management policy, multidisciplinary care (
e.g. oncology committee, patient discussion)
6Results
Differences in BCS use in CCCN region
7Results
- Null model (empty model, no explanatory
variables) - Relative effect of 3 levels on BCS use
Random part B (SE)
Hospital-level 0.123 (0.072) 3.4
Surgeon-level 0.194 (0.061) 5.4
Patient-level (?2/3) 3.290 91.2
Total 3.606 100
the lowest level variance is fixed to the
variance of a logistic distribution (p2/3),
therefore, the surgeon and hospital level
variances can only be interpreted as a proportion
of the total variance
8Results
Relative effects on BCS use (multivariate)
Final Model OR (95 CI)
Patient Size of tumour (cT) cT1 1.0
cT2 0.37 (0.31-0.44)
Detection mode Non-screen detected 1.0
Screen detected 1.41 (1.16-1.71)
Surgeon Volume lt30 1.0
30 1.04 (0.74-1.46)
Breast cancer WG No 1.0
Yes 1.40 (0.99-1.98)
Hospital Volume lt100 1.0
100 1.38 (0.71-2.66)
Multidisciplinary care 1.30 (1.08-1.58)
p lt 0.05
9Results
- Variation in BCS use (final model)
- Patient Tumour size and detection mode
- Surgeon membership breast cancer working group
- Hospital Multidisciplinary care (MD meeting,
oncology committee) - Volume (surgeon and hospital) no strong predictor
- Variance partly explained, but remaining
variation largely on surgeon level
10Conclusions
- Surgeon and hospital ? important starting points
for improving best practice - Actionable elements
- Patient level population based screening for
early detection - Surgeon multidisciplinary working group
- Hospital multidisciplinary care
- (A minimum) volume as pre-requisite for
organising multidisciplinary care - Unexplained surgeon variation conclusive
factors?
11Discussion
- BCS in early staged breast cancer ? best practice
- BUT Individual treatment depends on e.g.
- risk factors for local recurrence
- expected cosmetic result (breast- tumour ratio)
- co morbidity
- patient preferences
- Importance of link to outcomes
- Medical complications, survival
- Patient related satisfaction, quality of life
Article published in Breast Cancer Research and
Treatment (online available) M. Gort, M.
Broekhuis, R. Otter, N.S.Klazinga, Improvement
of best practice in breast cancer, actionable
surgeon and hospital factors, 2006
12Further research for actionable indicators
- Other cancers
- Different aspects
- Structure (organisation, volume)
- Process (compliance to guidelines, throughput
times..) - Outcomes (medical, patient related)
- Useful data sources CCCN
- Cancer Registration
- Visitatie oncological care
- Patient satisfaction research
- Guidelines
- Pattern of care studies
13- Comprehensive Cancer Centre North Netherlands
-
- Faculty of Management and Organization
- m.gort_at_ikn.nl