Hospital-level compliance with the commission on cancer's quality of care measures and the association with patient survival

被引:5
|
作者
Nussbaum, Daniel P. [1 ]
Rushing, Christel N. [2 ]
Sun, Zhifei [1 ]
Yerokun, Babatunde A. [1 ]
Worni, Mathias [3 ,4 ,5 ]
Saunders, Robert S. [6 ]
McClellan, Mark B. [6 ]
Niedzwiecki, Donna [2 ]
Greenup, Rachel A. [7 ]
Blazer, Dan G., III [8 ]
机构
[1] Duke Univ, Dept Surg, Durham, NC USA
[2] Duke Univ, Dept Biostat & Bioinformat, Durham, NC USA
[3] St Clara Hosp, Univ Ctr Gastrointestinal & Liver Dis, Clarunis, Dept Visceral Surg, Basel, Switzerland
[4] Univ Hosp, Basel, Switzerland
[5] Swiss Inst Translat & Entrepreneurial Med, Bern, Switzerland
[6] Duke Univ, Robert J Margolis Ctr Hlth Policy, Durham, NC USA
[7] Duke Univ, Duke Canc Inst, Dept Surg & Populat Hlth Sci, Durham, NC USA
[8] Duke Univ, Duke Canc Inst, Dept Surg, Durham, NC USA
来源
CANCER MEDICINE | 2021年 / 10卷 / 11期
关键词
cancer; hospitals; process measures; quality of care; III COLON-CANCER; PERFORMANCE-MEASURES; GASTRIC-CANCER; D2; GASTRECTOMY; OUTCOMES; OXALIPLATIN; TRIAL; FLUOROURACIL; LEUCOVORIN; MORTALITY;
D O I
10.1002/cam4.3875
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Background Quality measurement has become a priority for national healthcare reform, and valid measures are necessary to discriminate hospital performance and support value-based healthcare delivery. The Commission on Cancer (CoC) is the largest cancer-specific accreditor of hospital quality in the United States and has implemented Quality of Care Measures to evaluate cancer care delivery. However, none has been formally tested as a valid metric for assessing hospital performance based on actual patient outcomes. Methods Eligibility and compliance with the Quality of Care Measures are reported within the National Cancer Database, which also captures data for robust patient-level risk adjustment. Hospital-level compliance was calculated for the core measures, and the association with patient survival was tested using Cox regression. Results Seven hundred sixty-eight thousand nine hundred sixty-nine unique cancer cases were included from 1323 facilities. Increasing hospital-level compliance was associated with improved survival for only two measures, including a 35% reduced risk of mortality for the gastric cancer measure G15RLN (HR 0.65, 95% CI 0.58-0.72) and a 19% reduced risk of mortality for the colon cancer measure 12RLN (HR 0.81, 95% CI 0.77-0.85). For the lung cancer measure LNoSurg, increasing compliance was paradoxically associated with an increased risk of mortality (HR 1.14, 95% CI 1.08-1.20). For the remaining measures, hospital-level compliance demonstrated no consistent association with patient survival. Conclusion Hospital-level compliance with the CoC's Quality of Care Measures is not uniformly aligned with patient survival. In their current form, these measures do not reliably discriminate hospital performance and are limited as a tool for value-based healthcare delivery.
引用
收藏
页码:3533 / 3544
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Hospital-Level Compliance With Asthma Care Quality Measures at Children's Hospitals and Subsequent Asthma-Related Outcomes
    Morse, Rustin B.
    Hall, Matthew
    Fieldston, Evan S.
    McGwire, Gerd
    Anspacher, Melanie
    Sills, Marion R.
    Williams, Kristi
    Oyemwense, Naomi
    Mann, Keith J.
    Simon, Harold K.
    Shah, Samir S.
    [J]. JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 2011, 306 (13): : 1454 - 1460
  • [2] Survival by the Fittest: Hospital-Level Variation in Quality of Resuscitation Care
    Sinha, Shashank S.
    Chen, Lena M.
    Nallamothu, Brahmajee K.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION, 2014, 3 (01):
  • [3] Association of Patient-Level and Hospital-Level Factors With Timely Fracture Care by Race
    Gitajn, Ida Leah
    Werth, Paul
    Fernandes, Eseosa
    Sprague, Sheila
    O'Hara, Nathan N.
    Bzovsky, Sofia
    Marchand, Lucas S.
    Patterson, Joseph Thomas
    Lee, Christopher
    Slobogean, Gerard P.
    [J]. JAMA NETWORK OPEN, 2022, 5 (11) : E2244357
  • [4] Hospital-level Effects Contribute to Variations in Prostate Cancer Quality of Care
    Lawson, Keith A.
    Daignault, Katherine
    Abouassaly, Robert
    Khanna, Abhinav
    Martin, Lisa
    Goldenberg, Mitchell
    Hamilton, Robert J.
    Loblaw, Andrew
    Warde, Padraig
    Saarela, Olli
    Finelli, Antonio
    [J]. EUROPEAN UROLOGY ONCOLOGY, 2021, 4 (03): : 494 - 497
  • [5] The Value of Commission on Cancer Accreditation: Improving Survival Outcomes by Enhancing Compliance with Quality Measures
    Misra, Subhasis
    Fan, Ji
    Yanala, Ujwal
    Are, Chandrakanth
    [J]. ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY, 2019, 26 (06) : 1585 - 1587
  • [6] The Value of Commission on Cancer Accreditation: Improving Survival Outcomes by Enhancing Compliance with Quality Measures
    Subhasis Misra
    Ji Fan
    Ujwal Yanala
    Chandrakanth Are
    [J]. Annals of Surgical Oncology, 2019, 26 : 1585 - 1587
  • [7] Patient-Level and Hospital-Level Determinants of the Quality of Acute Stroke Care A Multilevel Modeling Approach
    Reeves, Mathew J.
    Gargano, Julia
    Maier, Kimberly S.
    Broderick, Joseph P.
    Frankel, Michael
    LaBresh, Kenneth A.
    Moomaw, Charles J.
    Schwamm, Lee
    [J]. STROKE, 2010, 41 (12) : 2924 - 2931
  • [8] Compliance with the Commission on Cancer Quality of Breast Cancer Care Measures: Self-Evaluation Advised
    Lodrigues, William
    Dumas, Judy
    Rao, Madhu
    Lilley, Lisa
    Rao, Roshni
    [J]. BREAST JOURNAL, 2011, 17 (02): : 167 - 171
  • [9] Hospital-level variation in the quality of urologic cancer surgery
    Gore, John L.
    Wright, Jonathan L.
    Daratha, Kenn B.
    Roberts, Kenneth P.
    Lin, Daniel W.
    Wessells, Hunter
    Porter, Michael
    [J]. CANCER, 2012, 118 (04) : 987 - 996
  • [10] Provider-Level and Hospital-Level Factors and Process Measures of Quality Care Delivered in Pediatric Emergency Departments
    Marcin, James P.
    Romano, Patrick S.
    Dayal, Parul
    Dharmar, Madan
    Chamberlain, James M.
    Dudley, Nanette
    Macias, Charles G.
    Nigrovic, Lise E.
    Powell, Elizabeth C.
    Rogers, Alexander J.
    Sonnett, Meridith
    Tzimenatos, Leah
    Alpern, Elizabeth R.
    Andrews-Dickert, Rebecca
    Borgialli, Dominic A.
    Sidney, Erika
    Casper, T. Charles
    Kuppermann, Nathan
    [J]. ACADEMIC PEDIATRICS, 2020, 20 (04) : 524 - 531