J
Natl Cancer Inst 2001 Apr 4;93(7):501-15
Impact of patient and provider characteristics on the treatment and
outcomes of colorectal cancer.
Hodgson DC, Fuchs CS, Ayanian JZ.
D. C. Hodgson, Department of Radiation Oncology, Princess Margaret Hospital
and Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, University of Toronto,
ON, Canada.
While the management and prognosis of colorectal cancer are largely dependent
on clinical features such as tumor stage, there is considerable variation
in treatment and outcome not explained by traditional prognostic factors.
To guide efforts by researchers and health-care providers to improve quality
of care, we review studies of variation in treatment and outcome by patient
and provider characteristics. Surgeon expertise and case volume are associated
with improved tumor control, although surgeon and hospital factors are
not associated consistently with perioperative mortality or long-term
survival. Some studies indicate that patients are less likely to undergo
permanent colostomy if they are treated by high-volume surgeons and hospitals.
Differences in treatment and outcome of patients managed by health maintenance
organizations or fee-for-service providers have not generally been found.
Older patients are less likely to receive adjuvant therapy after surgery,
even after adjustment for comorbid illness. In the United States, black
patients with colorectal cancer receive less aggressive therapy and are
more likely to die of this disease than white patients, but cancer-specific
survival differences are reduced or eliminated when black patients receive
comparable treatment. Patients of low socioeconomic status (SES) have
worse survival than those of higher SES, although the reasons for this
discrepancy are not well understood. Variations in treatment may arise
from inadequate physician knowledge of practice guidelines, treatment
decisions based on unmeasured clinical factors, or patient preferences.
To improve quality of care for colorectal cancer, a better understanding
of mechanisms underlying associations between patient and provider characteristics
and outcomes is required.
Publication Types: Review; Review, Tutorial
PMID: 11287444 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]