TY - JOUR
T1 - The quality of surgical pathology care for men undergoing radical prostatectomy in the U.S.
AU - Miller, David C.
AU - Spencer, Benjamin A.
AU - Shah, Rajal B.
AU - Ritchey, Jamie
AU - Stewart, Andrew K.
AU - Gay, E. Greer
AU - Dunn, Rodney L.
AU - Wei, John T.
AU - Litwin, Mark S.
PY - 2007/6/15
Y1 - 2007/6/15
N2 - BACKGROUND. The authors assessed adherence with the College of American Pathologists (CAP) radical prostatectomy (RP) practice protocol in a national sample of men who underwent RP for early-stage prostate cancer. METHODS. Using the National Cancer Data Base, the authors identified a nationally representative sample of 1240 men (unweighted) who underwent RP. For each patient, local cancer registrars performed an explicit medical record review to assess patient-level compliance with surgical pathology report documentation of 7 morphologic criteria (ie, quality indicators). Applying the CAP prognostic factor classification framework, composite measures and all-or-none measures of quality indicator compliance were calculated for the following analytic categories: 1) a strict subset of CAP category I prognostic factors (3 indicators), 2) a broad subset of CAP category I factors (6 indicators), and 3) the full set of 7 indicators. RESULTS. Among a weighted sample of 24,420 patients who underwent RP, compliance with documentation of the CAP category I factors varied from 54% (95% confidence interval [95% CI], 50-58%) for pathologic tumor, lymph node, metastases classification (according to the American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system) to 97% (95% CI, 96-99%) for Gleason score. In composite, RP pathology reports contained 83% (95% CI, 81-84%), 85% (95% CI, 84-87%), and 79% (95% CI, 78-80%) of the recommended data elements measured by the strict CAP category I subset, the broad CAP category I subset, and the full set of 7 indicators, respectively. In contrast to the generally higher composite scores, only 52% (95% CI, 48-56%) and 41% (95% CI, 37-45%) of men who underwent RP had complete documentation in their pathology reports for the strict and broad CAP category I subsets, respectively. CONCLUSIONS. RP surgical pathology reports contained most of the recommended data elements; however, the frequent absence of pathologic stage provides an opportunity for quality improvement.
AB - BACKGROUND. The authors assessed adherence with the College of American Pathologists (CAP) radical prostatectomy (RP) practice protocol in a national sample of men who underwent RP for early-stage prostate cancer. METHODS. Using the National Cancer Data Base, the authors identified a nationally representative sample of 1240 men (unweighted) who underwent RP. For each patient, local cancer registrars performed an explicit medical record review to assess patient-level compliance with surgical pathology report documentation of 7 morphologic criteria (ie, quality indicators). Applying the CAP prognostic factor classification framework, composite measures and all-or-none measures of quality indicator compliance were calculated for the following analytic categories: 1) a strict subset of CAP category I prognostic factors (3 indicators), 2) a broad subset of CAP category I factors (6 indicators), and 3) the full set of 7 indicators. RESULTS. Among a weighted sample of 24,420 patients who underwent RP, compliance with documentation of the CAP category I factors varied from 54% (95% confidence interval [95% CI], 50-58%) for pathologic tumor, lymph node, metastases classification (according to the American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system) to 97% (95% CI, 96-99%) for Gleason score. In composite, RP pathology reports contained 83% (95% CI, 81-84%), 85% (95% CI, 84-87%), and 79% (95% CI, 78-80%) of the recommended data elements measured by the strict CAP category I subset, the broad CAP category I subset, and the full set of 7 indicators, respectively. In contrast to the generally higher composite scores, only 52% (95% CI, 48-56%) and 41% (95% CI, 37-45%) of men who underwent RP had complete documentation in their pathology reports for the strict and broad CAP category I subsets, respectively. CONCLUSIONS. RP surgical pathology reports contained most of the recommended data elements; however, the frequent absence of pathologic stage provides an opportunity for quality improvement.
KW - Pathology
KW - Prostate cancer
KW - Quality
KW - Radical prostatectomy
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U2 - 10.1002/cncr.22698
DO - 10.1002/cncr.22698
M3 - Article
C2 - 17492683
AN - SCOPUS:34250169034
SN - 0008-543X
VL - 109
SP - 2445
EP - 2453
JO - Cancer
JF - Cancer
IS - 12
ER -