Birkmeyer Nancy J O, Goodney Philip P, Stukel Therese A, Hillner Bruce E, Birkmeyer John D
Department of Surgery, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Cancer. 2005 Feb 1;103(3):435-41. doi: 10.1002/cncr.20785.
The National Cancer Institute (NCI) designates cancer centers as regional centers of excellence in research and patient care. Although these centers often advertise their superior outcomes, their relative performance has not been examined empirically. In the current study, the authors assessed whether patients at NCI cancer centers compared with patients at control hospitals had lower mortality rates after major cancer surgery.
Using the national Medicare database (1994-1999), the authors assessed surgical mortality and late survival rates for 63,860 elderly patients undergoing resection for lung, esophageal, gastric, pancreatic, bladder, or colon carcinoma. For assessing performance, patients treated at the 51 NCI cancer centers were compared with patients from 51 control hospitals with the highest volumes for each procedure. Mortality rates (surgical and 5-year rates) were adjusted for patient characteristics and residual differences in procedure volume.
NCI cancer centers had lower adjusted surgical mortality rates than control hospitals for 4 of the 6 procedures, including colectomy (5.4% vs. 6.7%; P = 0.026), pulmonary resection (6.3% vs. 7.9%; P = 0.010), gastrectomy (8.0% vs. 12.2%; P < 0.001), and esophagectomy (7.9% vs. 10.9%; P = 0.027). Nonsignificant trends toward lower adjusted operative mortality rates at NCI cancer centers were also observed for cystectomy and pancreatic resection. Among patients surviving surgery, however, there were no important differences in subsequent 5-year mortality rates between NCI cancer centers and control hospitals for any of the procedures.
For many cancer procedures, patients undergoing surgery at NCI-designated cancer centers had lower surgical mortality rates than those treated at comparably high-volume hospitals, but similar long-term survival rates.
美国国立癌症研究所(NCI)将癌症中心指定为研究和患者护理方面的卓越区域中心。尽管这些中心经常宣传其卓越的治疗效果,但其相对表现尚未经过实证检验。在当前研究中,作者评估了与对照医院的患者相比,NCI癌症中心的患者在接受重大癌症手术后的死亡率是否更低。
作者使用国家医疗保险数据库(1994 - 1999年),评估了63860名接受肺、食管、胃、胰腺、膀胱或结肠癌切除术的老年患者的手术死亡率和晚期生存率。为评估治疗效果,将在51个NCI癌症中心接受治疗的患者与来自51家每种手术量最高的对照医院的患者进行比较。对死亡率(手术死亡率和5年死亡率)进行了患者特征和手术量残余差异的调整。
在6种手术中的4种手术中,NCI癌症中心的调整后手术死亡率低于对照医院,包括结肠切除术(5.4%对6.7%;P = 0.026)、肺切除术(6.3%对7.9%;P = 0.010)、胃切除术(8.0%对12.2%;P < 0.001)和食管切除术(7.9%对10.9%;P = 0.027)。对于膀胱切除术和胰腺切除术,在NCI癌症中心也观察到调整后手术死亡率较低的非显著趋势。然而,在手术存活的患者中,对于任何一种手术,NCI癌症中心和对照医院之间随后的5年死亡率没有重要差异。
对于许多癌症手术,在NCI指定的癌症中心接受手术的患者的手术死亡率低于在手术量相当高的医院接受治疗的患者,但长期生存率相似。