Cancer Control Center, Osaka International Cancer Institute, Osaka, Japan.
Cancer Sci. 2021 Jun;112(6):2513-2521. doi: 10.1111/cas.14847. Epub 2021 May 2.
The Japanese national and prefectural governments have accredited high-capacity, high-experience cancer care hospitals as "designated cancer care hospitals" to standardize cancer care, centralize patients, and improve clinical outcomes, but the performance of these designated hospitals has not been evaluated. We retrospectively compared 3-year patient survival in national, prefectural, and nondesignated cancer care hospitals in 2010-2012 in Osaka using registry-based data of 86 456 surgically treated cancer patients aged 15 years or older. Hazard ratios and 3-year survival probabilities were compared among national, prefectural, and nondesignated hospitals using a Cox proportional hazard regression model. Subgroup analyses for six cancers (stomach, colorectum, lung, breast, uterus, and prostate) and other cancers were carried out. In 2010-2012, 36 634 (42.4%), 38 048 (44.0%), and 11 774 (13.6%) patients were treated at national, prefectural, and nondesignated hospitals, respectively. The mortality hazard for all-site cancer was significantly lower in national and prefectural designated hospitals (adjusted hazard ratio 0.60 [95% confidence interval, 0.53-0.68] and 0.72 [0.66-0.80], respectively) than in nondesignated hospitals. The adjusted 3-year survival probabilities for all-site cancer were 86.6%, 84.2%, and 78.8% in national, prefectural, and nondesignated hospitals, respectively. Site-specific subgroup analyses revealed significantly lower hazard ratios in national and prefectural hospitals than in nondesignated hospitals for stomach, colorectal, lung, breast, and other cancers. To conclude, the majority of cancer patients underwent surgeries at designated hospitals and had higher 3-year survival probabilities than those treated at nondesignated hospitals. Further centralization of patients from nondesignated to designated hospitals could improve population-level survival.
日本国家和地方政府已将高容量、高经验的癌症治疗医院认证为“指定癌症治疗医院”,以规范癌症治疗、集中患者并提高临床结果,但这些指定医院的绩效尚未得到评估。我们使用 2010-2012 年大阪基于登记的 86456 名接受手术治疗的 15 岁及以上癌症患者的数据,回顾性比较了国立、县立和非指定癌症治疗医院的 3 年患者生存率。使用 Cox 比例风险回归模型比较了国立、县立和非指定医院之间的风险比和 3 年生存率。对六种癌症(胃、结直肠、肺、乳腺、子宫和前列腺)和其他癌症进行了亚组分析。在 2010-2012 年,分别有 36634(42.4%)、38048(44.0%)和 11774(13.6%)名患者在国立、县立和非指定医院接受治疗。所有部位癌症的死亡率风险在国立和县立指定医院明显较低(调整后的风险比分别为 0.60[95%置信区间,0.53-0.68]和 0.72[0.66-0.80]),而非指定医院。所有部位癌症的调整后 3 年生存率分别为国立、县立和非指定医院的 86.6%、84.2%和 78.8%。针对特定部位的亚组分析显示,国立和县立医院的风险比明显低于非指定医院,用于胃、结直肠、肺、乳腺和其他癌症。总之,大多数癌症患者在指定医院接受手术治疗,3 年生存率高于非指定医院。进一步将患者从非指定医院集中到指定医院可能会提高人群的生存率。