Alderman Amy K, Hawley Sarah T, Waljee Jennifer, Morrow Monica, Katz Steven J
Section of Plastic Surgery, Department of Surgery, the University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0340, USA.
Cancer. 2007 May 1;109(9):1715-20. doi: 10.1002/cncr.22598.
General surgeons' attitudes toward breast reconstruction may affect referrals to plastic surgeons. The propensity to refer to plastic surgeons prior to surgical treatment decisions for breast cancer varies markedly across general surgeons and is associated with receipt of reconstruction. In this study, the authors used data from a large physician survey to examine factors associated with general surgeons' propensity to refer breast cancer patients to plastic surgeons prior to mastectomy.
The authors surveyed all attending general surgeons (N=456 surgeons) from a population-based sample of breast cancer patients who were diagnosed in Detroit and Los Angeles during 2002 (N=1844 patients), with a surgeon response rate of 80%. The dependent variable was surgeon report of the percentage of their mastectomy patients in the past 2 years who they referred to plastic surgeons prior to initial surgery (referral propensity). Referral propensity was collapsed into 3 categories (<25%, 25-75%, and >75%) and regressed on the following covariates using logistic regression: Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results registry; number of years in clinical practice; surgeons' sex; annual breast surgery volume; and hospital setting.
Only 24% of surgeons referred>75% of their patients to plastic surgeons prior to surgery (high referral propensity). High referral propensity was associated independently with surgeons who were women (odds ratio [OR], 2.3; P=.03), high clinical breast surgery volume (OR, 4.1; P<.01), and working in cancer centers (OR, 2.4; P=.01). High-referral surgeons and low-referral surgeons also had different beliefs about women's preferences for reconstruction, with the low-referral surgeons perceiving more access barriers (cost, availability of plastic surgeons) and a lower patient priority for reconstruction.
A large proportion of surgeons do not refer breast cancer patients to plastic surgery at the time of surgical decision-making. Surgeons who have a high referral propensity are more likely to be women, to have a high clinical breast volume, and to work in cancer centers. These data support the importance of comanagement through multidisciplinary care models. Women need more opportunities to discuss reconstructive options to make informed surgical treatment decisions about their breast cancer.
普通外科医生对乳房重建的态度可能会影响向整形外科医生的转诊。在做出乳腺癌手术治疗决策之前,将患者转诊给整形外科医生的倾向在普通外科医生中差异显著,且与接受重建手术有关。在本研究中,作者使用来自一项大型医生调查的数据,以检查与普通外科医生在乳房切除术之前将乳腺癌患者转诊给整形外科医生的倾向相关的因素。
作者对底特律和洛杉矶2002年确诊的基于人群样本的乳腺癌患者的所有主治普通外科医生(N = 456名医生)进行了调查(N = 1844名患者),医生回复率为80%。因变量是医生报告的在过去2年中,他们在初次手术前转诊给整形外科医生的乳房切除术患者的百分比(转诊倾向)。转诊倾向被分为3类(<25%、25 - 75%和>75%),并使用逻辑回归对以下协变量进行回归分析:监测、流行病学和最终结果登记处;临床实践年限;医生性别;年度乳房手术量;以及医院环境。
只有24%的医生在手术前将超过75%的患者转诊给整形外科医生(高转诊倾向)。高转诊倾向与女性医生(优势比[OR],2.3;P = 0.03)、高临床乳房手术量(OR,4.1;P < 0.01)以及在癌症中心工作(OR,2.4;P = 0.01)独立相关。高转诊医生和低转诊医生对女性乳房重建偏好也有不同看法,低转诊医生认为存在更多获取障碍(成本、整形外科医生的可获得性),且患者对重建的优先级较低。
很大一部分医生在手术决策时不会将乳腺癌患者转诊至整形外科。具有高转诊倾向的医生更有可能是女性,有高临床乳房手术量,且在癌症中心工作。这些数据支持了通过多学科护理模式进行共同管理的重要性。女性需要更多机会讨论重建选择,以便就其乳腺癌做出明智的手术治疗决策。