University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor.
Center for Healthcare Outcomes and Policy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
JAMA Surg. 2019 Jun 1;154(6):516-523. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2018.5521.
The American College of Surgeons National Accreditation Program for Rectal Cancer (NAPRC) promotes multidisciplinary care to improve oncologic outcomes in rectal cancer. However, accreditation requirements may be difficult to achieve for the lowest-performing institutions. Thus, it is unknown whether the NAPRC will motivate care improvement in these settings or widen disparities.
To characterize hospitals' readiness for accreditation and identify differences in the patients cared for in hospitals most and least prepared for accreditation.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A total of 1315 American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer-accredited hospitals in the National Cancer Database from January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2015, were sorted into 4 cohorts, organized by high vs low volume and adherence to process standards, and patient and hospital characteristics and oncologic outcomes were compared. The patients included those who underwent surgical resection with curative intent for rectal adenocarcinoma, mucinous adenocarcinoma, or signet ring cell carcinoma. Data analysis was performed from November 2017 to January 2018.
Hospitals' readiness for accreditation, as determined by their annual resection volume and adherence to 5 available NAPRC process standards.
Hospital characteristics, patient sociodemographic characteristics, and 5-year survival by hospital.
Among the 1315 included hospitals, 38 (2.9%) met proposed thresholds for all 5 NAPRC process standards and 220 (16.7%) met the threshold on 4 standards. High-volume hospitals (≥20 resections per year) tended to be academic institutions (67 of 104 [64.4%] vs 159 of 1211 [13.1%]; P = .001), whereas low-volume hospitals (<20 resections per year) tended to be comprehensive community cancer programs (530 of 1211 [43.8%] vs 28 of 104 [26.9%]; P = .001). Patients in low-volume hospitals were more likely to be older (11 429 of 28 076 [40.7%] vs 4339 of 12 148 [35.7%]; P < .001) and have public insurance (13 054 of 28 076 [46.5%] vs 4905 of 12 148 [40.4%]; P < .001). Low-adherence hospitals were more likely to care for black and Hispanic patients (1980 of 19 577 [17.2%] vs 3554 of 20 647 [10.1%]; P < .001). On multivariable Cox proportional hazards model regression, high-volume hospitals had better 5-year survival outcomes than low-volume hospitals (hazard ratio, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.99-1.00; P < .001), but there was no significant survival difference by hospital process standard adherence.
Hospitals least likely to receive NAPRC accreditation tended to be community institutions with worse survival outcomes, serving patients at a lower socioeconomic position. To possibly avoid exacerbating disparities in access to high-quality rectal cancer care, the NAPRC study findings suggest enabling access for patients with socioeconomic disadvantage or engaging in quality improvement for hospitals not yet achieving accreditation benchmarks.
重要性:美国外科医师学院直肠癌国家认证计划(NAPRC)旨在促进多学科护理,以改善直肠癌的肿瘤学结果。然而,对于表现最差的机构来说,获得认证的要求可能难以实现。因此,尚不清楚 NAPRC 是否会激励这些环境中的护理改进,还是会扩大差距。
目的:描述医院准备获得认证的情况,并确定在最有准备和最不准备获得认证的医院中接受治疗的患者之间的差异。
设计、设置和参与者:2011 年 1 月 1 日至 2015 年 12 月 31 日,全国癌症数据库中共有 1315 家美国外科医师学院癌症委员会认证的医院被分为 4 个队列,按高或低的手术量和对 5 个可用 NAPRC 流程标准的遵守程度进行组织,并比较了患者和医院的特征以及肿瘤学结果。纳入了接受根治性手术切除直肠腺癌、黏液腺癌或印戒细胞癌的患者。数据分析于 2017 年 11 月至 2018 年 1 月进行。
暴露:通过每年的切除量和对 5 个可用 NAPRC 流程标准的遵守程度来确定医院获得认证的准备情况。
主要结果和措施:按医院划分的医院特征、患者社会人口统计学特征和 5 年生存率。
结果:在 1315 家纳入的医院中,有 38 家(2.9%)满足了所有 5 个 NAPRC 流程标准的建议阈值,220 家(16.7%)满足了 4 个标准的阈值。高手术量医院(≥20 例/年)往往是学术机构(104 家医院中的 67 家[64.4%]与 1211 家医院中的 159 家[13.1%];P = .001),而低手术量医院(<20 例/年)往往是综合性社区癌症项目(1211 家医院中的 530 家[43.8%]与 104 家医院中的 28 家[26.9%];P = .001)。低手术量医院的患者年龄更大(28076 例患者中的 11429 例[40.7%]与 12148 例患者中的 4339 例[35.7%];P < .001),并且有更多的公共保险(28076 例患者中的 13054 例[46.5%]与 12148 例患者中的 4905 例[40.4%];P < .001)。低标准遵守率的医院更有可能治疗黑人和西班牙裔患者(19577 例患者中的 1980 例[17.2%]与 20647 例患者中的 3554 例[10.1%];P < .001)。多变量 Cox 比例风险回归模型分析显示,高手术量医院的 5 年生存率优于低手术量医院(危险比,0.99;95%CI,0.99-1.00;P < .001),但医院流程标准遵守情况与生存无显著差异。
结论和相关性:不太可能获得 NAPRC 认证的医院往往是社区机构,生存结果较差,为社会经济地位较低的患者提供服务。为了避免在获得高质量直肠癌治疗方面的差距进一步扩大,NAPRC 研究结果表明,应使处于不利社会经济地位的患者获得治疗机会,或为尚未达到认证基准的医院进行质量改进。