Quality indicators in breast cancer surgery

被引:2
|
作者
Donoso R, Ana Maria [1 ]
Amar C, Marcela [1 ]
Minassian M, Matias [1 ,2 ]
Salazar M, Claudio [3 ]
Arbulo L, Douglas [1 ,2 ]
Slater M, Jeannie [4 ]
Schwartz J, Ricardo [1 ]
Gomez S, Lionel [1 ]
Lee C, Kuen [1 ]
机构
[1] Hosp Mil, Serv Cirugia, Santiago, Chile
[2] Univ Los Andes, Santiago, Chile
[3] Univ Santiago, Santiago, Chile
[4] Hosp Mil, Santiago, Chile
来源
REVISTA CHILENA DE CIRUGIA | 2013年 / 65卷 / 03期
关键词
Breast cancer; surgery; quality indicators; OF-CARE; UNITED-STATES; PERSPECTIVE; ADHERENCE; OUTCOMES; CENTERS;
D O I
10.4067/S0718-40262013000300004
中图分类号
R61 [外科手术学];
学科分类号
摘要
Introduction: Although clear guidelines for breast cancer management have been developed and widespread, there are many variations between centers and even among breast cancer surgeons, with impact in clinical outcomes. Use of quality indicators to assess surgical care allows comparison with standards and with other centers and monitoring changes post intervention. Objective: To apply quality indicators to breast cancer surgery and evaluate usefulness. Material and Methods: Selected indicators obtained from EUSOMA 2008 workshop were applied to 213 consecutive surgical treatment breast cancer patients from Hospital Militar de Santiago de Chile between 2006 and 2011, comparing results with previously defined standards. Results: Benign/malignant index in surgical biopsies: 1: 2.27 (minimum standard: 1/2; Optimum: 1/4), patients with complete pathologic report percentage: 99,2% (minimum: 95%, optimum: 98%), breast conserving surgery percentage: 80.20% (minimum: 70%, optimum: 80%), patients with sufficient axillary sampling percentage: 92.4% (minimum: 95%, optimum: 98%), correct axillary dissection indication percentage: 100% (minimum: 95%, optimum: 98%) and patients who underwent single surgery percentage: 90.40% (minimum: 80%, optimum: 90%), most of them ranged between established standards. Conclusion: The use of quality indicators allows breast cancer surgery result evaluation, enabling comparison between centers and established standards, giving objective and reproducible information, helpful to plan process optimization. These or similar indicators are useful in all breast cancer treatment steps and for breast cancer unit accreditation processes. Our indicator values that are under the standard reveal that some specific local indicators are required.
引用
收藏
页码:216 / 221
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Early effect of surgery on quality of life in women with operable breast cancer
    Pandey, Manoj
    Thomas, Bejoy C.
    Ramdas, Kunnambath
    Ratheesan, Kuttan
    JAPANESE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2006, 36 (07) : 468 - 472
  • [42] Impact of hospital volume on quality indicators for rectal cancer surgery in British Columbia, Canada
    McColl, Ryan J.
    McGahan, Colleen E.
    Cai, Eric
    Olson, Rob
    Cheung, Winson Y.
    Raval, Manoj J.
    Phang, Paul Terry
    Karimuddin, Ahmer A.
    Brown, Carl J.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2017, 213 (02) : 388 - 394
  • [43] Quality Indicators Compliance and Survival Outcomes in Breast Cancer according to Age in a Certified Center
    Osorio, Fernando
    Barros, Antonio S.
    Peleteiro, Barbara
    Amendoeira, Isabel
    Fougo, Jose Luis
    CANCERS, 2023, 15 (05)
  • [44] Effect of surgeon's caseload on the quality of surgery and breast cancer recurrence
    Peltoniemi, Paivi
    Huhtala, Heini
    Holli, Kaija
    Pylkkanen, Liisa
    BREAST, 2012, 21 (04) : 539 - 543
  • [45] Ways of developing quality indicators in cancer care - opportunities, challenges and limitations for the Polish healthcare system
    Piekarska, Karolina
    Zysk, Rafal
    Krzakowski, Maciej
    Walewski, Jan
    Politynska, Barbara
    Wojtukiewicz, Marek Z.
    ONCOLOGY IN CLINICAL PRACTICE, 2022, 18 (01): : 40 - 60
  • [46] Quality Indicators for Global Benchmarking of Localized Prostate Cancer Management
    Sampurno, Fanny
    Zheng, Jia
    Di Stefano, Lydia
    Millar, Jeremy L.
    Foster, Claire
    Fuedea, Ferran
    Higano, Celestia
    Hulan, Hartwig
    Mark, Stephen
    Moore, Caroline
    Richardson, Alison
    Sullivan, Frank
    Wenger, Neil S.
    Wittmann, Daniela
    Evans, Sue
    JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2018, 200 (02) : 319 - 325
  • [47] Quality Indicators in Ambulatory Surgery: A Literature Review Comparing Portuguese and International Systems
    Nunes, Joao Silva
    Gomes, Rebeca
    Povo, Ana
    Alves, Eurico Castro
    ACTA MEDICA PORTUGUESA, 2018, 31 (7-8): : 425 - 430
  • [48] Using clinical cancer registry data for estimation of quality indicators: Results from the Norwegian breast cancer registry
    Hartmann-Johnsena, Olaf Johan
    Karesen, Rolf
    Schlichting, Ellen
    Naume, Bjorn
    Nygard, Jan F.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INFORMATICS, 2019, 125 : 102 - 109
  • [49] Understanding the Role and Value of Process Quality Indicators in Older Vascular Surgery Inpatients
    Thillainadesan, Janani
    Hilmer, Sarah N.
    Mudge, Alison M.
    Aitken, Sarah J.
    Kearney, Leanne
    Monaro, Sue R.
    Li, Susan J.
    Schasser, Sue
    Kerdic, Richard
    Tang, Robert
    Naganathan, Vasi
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH, 2021, 267 : 91 - 101
  • [50] Defining Quality Indicators for Breast Device Surgery: Using Registries for Global Benchmarking
    Begum, Husna
    Vishwanath, Swarna
    Merenda, Michelle
    Tacey, Mark
    Dean, Nicola
    Elder, Elisabeth
    Mureau, Marc
    Bezic, Ron
    Carter, Pamela
    Cooter, Rodney D.
    Deva, Anand
    Earnest, Arul
    Higgs, Michael
    Klein, Howard
    Magnusson, Mark
    Moore, Colin
    Rakhorst, Hinne
    Saunders, Christobel
    Stark, Birgit
    Hopper, Ingrid
    PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY-GLOBAL OPEN, 2019, 7 (08)