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Evaluation of the clinical and economic impact of delays to surgery in patients with periampullary cancer

BACKGROUND: Early treatment is the only potential cure for periampullary cancer. The pathway to surgery is complex and involves multiple procedures across local and specialist hospitals. The aim of this study was to analyse variability within this pathway, and its impact on cost and outcomes. METHOD...

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Autores principales: Pandé, R., Hodson, J., Murray, A., Marcon, F., Kalisvaart, M., Marudanayagam, R., Sutcliffe, R. P., Mirza, D. F., Isaac, J., Roberts, K. J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6677092/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31388640
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bjs5.50161
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author Pandé, R.
Hodson, J.
Murray, A.
Marcon, F.
Kalisvaart, M.
Marudanayagam, R.
Sutcliffe, R. P.
Mirza, D. F.
Isaac, J.
Roberts, K. J.
author_facet Pandé, R.
Hodson, J.
Murray, A.
Marcon, F.
Kalisvaart, M.
Marudanayagam, R.
Sutcliffe, R. P.
Mirza, D. F.
Isaac, J.
Roberts, K. J.
author_sort Pandé, R.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Early treatment is the only potential cure for periampullary cancer. The pathway to surgery is complex and involves multiple procedures across local and specialist hospitals. The aim of this study was to analyse variability within this pathway, and its impact on cost and outcomes. METHODS: Patients undergoing surgery for periampullary cancer (2011–2016) were identified retrospectively and their pathway to surgery was analysed. Patients who had early surgery (shortest quartile, Q1) were compared with those having late surgery (longest quartile, Q4). RESULTS: A total of 483 patients were included in the study, with 121 and 124 patients in Q1 and Q4 respectively. The median time from initial CT to surgery was 21 days for Q1 versus 112 days for Q4 (P < 0·001). Diagnostic delays were common in Q4; these patients required significantly more investigations than those in Q1 (endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS): 74·2 versus 18·2 per cent respectively, P < 0·001; MRI: 33·6 versus 20·6 per cent, P = 0·036). The median time to diagnostic EUS was 13 days in Q1 versus 59 days in Q4 (P < 0·001). Some 42·1 per cent of jaundiced patients in Q1 underwent preoperative biliary drainage, compared with all patients in Q4. There were significantly more unplanned admissions and associated longer duration of hospital stay per patient and costs in Q4 than in Q1 (median: 8 versus 3 days respectively; €5652 versus €2088; both P < 0·001). There was a higher likelihood of potentially curative surgery in Q1 (82·6 per cent versus 66·9 per cent in Q4; P = 0·005). CONCLUSION: There is wide variation across the entire pathway, suggesting that multiple strategies are required to enable early surgery. Defining an effective pathway by anticipating the need for investigations and avoiding biliary drainage reduces unplanned admissions and costs and increases resection rates.
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spelling pubmed-66770922019-08-06 Evaluation of the clinical and economic impact of delays to surgery in patients with periampullary cancer Pandé, R. Hodson, J. Murray, A. Marcon, F. Kalisvaart, M. Marudanayagam, R. Sutcliffe, R. P. Mirza, D. F. Isaac, J. Roberts, K. J. BJS Open Original Articles BACKGROUND: Early treatment is the only potential cure for periampullary cancer. The pathway to surgery is complex and involves multiple procedures across local and specialist hospitals. The aim of this study was to analyse variability within this pathway, and its impact on cost and outcomes. METHODS: Patients undergoing surgery for periampullary cancer (2011–2016) were identified retrospectively and their pathway to surgery was analysed. Patients who had early surgery (shortest quartile, Q1) were compared with those having late surgery (longest quartile, Q4). RESULTS: A total of 483 patients were included in the study, with 121 and 124 patients in Q1 and Q4 respectively. The median time from initial CT to surgery was 21 days for Q1 versus 112 days for Q4 (P < 0·001). Diagnostic delays were common in Q4; these patients required significantly more investigations than those in Q1 (endoscopic ultrasonography (EUS): 74·2 versus 18·2 per cent respectively, P < 0·001; MRI: 33·6 versus 20·6 per cent, P = 0·036). The median time to diagnostic EUS was 13 days in Q1 versus 59 days in Q4 (P < 0·001). Some 42·1 per cent of jaundiced patients in Q1 underwent preoperative biliary drainage, compared with all patients in Q4. There were significantly more unplanned admissions and associated longer duration of hospital stay per patient and costs in Q4 than in Q1 (median: 8 versus 3 days respectively; €5652 versus €2088; both P < 0·001). There was a higher likelihood of potentially curative surgery in Q1 (82·6 per cent versus 66·9 per cent in Q4; P = 0·005). CONCLUSION: There is wide variation across the entire pathway, suggesting that multiple strategies are required to enable early surgery. Defining an effective pathway by anticipating the need for investigations and avoiding biliary drainage reduces unplanned admissions and costs and increases resection rates. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd 2019-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6677092/ /pubmed/31388640 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bjs5.50161 Text en © 2019 The Authors. BJS Open published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of BJS Society Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Pandé, R.
Hodson, J.
Murray, A.
Marcon, F.
Kalisvaart, M.
Marudanayagam, R.
Sutcliffe, R. P.
Mirza, D. F.
Isaac, J.
Roberts, K. J.
Evaluation of the clinical and economic impact of delays to surgery in patients with periampullary cancer
title Evaluation of the clinical and economic impact of delays to surgery in patients with periampullary cancer
title_full Evaluation of the clinical and economic impact of delays to surgery in patients with periampullary cancer
title_fullStr Evaluation of the clinical and economic impact of delays to surgery in patients with periampullary cancer
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the clinical and economic impact of delays to surgery in patients with periampullary cancer
title_short Evaluation of the clinical and economic impact of delays to surgery in patients with periampullary cancer
title_sort evaluation of the clinical and economic impact of delays to surgery in patients with periampullary cancer
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6677092/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31388640
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bjs5.50161
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