Keywords
pancreatic cancer, surgical care, Nova Scotia, quality indicators, mortality, survival
pancreatic cancer, surgical care, Nova Scotia, quality indicators, mortality, survival
Pancreatic cancer (PC) is one of the most common gastrointestinal malignancies in North America and Europe1,2. In comparison to many other malignancies, it has poor prognosis due to late diagnosis and low response to current chemo-radiation therapies2. In addition to aggressive biology, recent data also suggest that, within different health systems, the quality of care provided to PC patients is heterogeneous and often suboptimal3–11. In Canada, national data published in 201412 revealed that the overall 5-year survival of patients diagnosed with PC correlated with the geographical areas of their residence, with Nova Scotia having the lowest survival rate (4.7% 5-year survival in comparison to the national rate of 9.1%; P<0.05)13. Several hypotheses have been raised to explain these findings11: lower socio-economic conditions, higher alcohol and tobacco consumption, more sedentary lifestyle and higher prevalence of obesity than in other Canadian provinces14–16. Alternatively, these results might be due to lower quality of care delivered to PC patients living in Nova Scotia where, contrary to several other Canadian provinces, a formal and coordinated quality improvement intervention for PC had never occurred11.
The primary aim of this study was to compare the quality of care and outcomes of patients who underwent surgical therapy for PC in Nova Scotia over a 10-year period using disease-specific quality indicators (QIs) published in the scientific literature as references11,17.
The study population included a cohort of patients older than 18 years of age who had undergone resection for primary exocrine pancreatic cancers (PC) in the province of Nova Scotia, Canada over a 10-year period (April 1, 2001–March 31, 2011). Diagnostic codes of the International Classification of Disease for Oncology, 3rd edition (ICD-O-3) were used to select patients with PC from the Nova Scotia Cancer Registry (NSCR), a prospectively maintained provincial registry of all patients affected by malignant diseases in the province. Diagnostic codes of malignancies of the exocrine pancreas used for this study are summarized in Table 1. Patients were excluded if affected by pancreatic endocrine neoplasms, lymphomas, sarcomas, metastases from other malignancies or direct invasion of tumors originating in surrounding organs (e.g. retroperitoneum, gastrointestinal tract).
Each patient who satisfied the inclusion criteria was assigned an identification (ID) number to protect patients’ privacy. Additional administrative datasets were linked to the NSCR for completion of sociodemographic and clinical data as represented in Figure 1. Linked datasets included the Oncology Patient Information System (OPIS), Medical Service Insurance (MSI) Physician Services, Medical Service Insurance (MSI) Patient Registry, and the Canadian Institutes of Health Information (CIHI) Discharge Abstract Database (DAD)18. These datasets were linked to the NSCR by the Population Health Research Unit (PHRU) at Dalhousie University. The methodology used to link these administrative datasets has been described in details in previous manuscripts published by our group17,18. Surgical patients were excluded if they underwent palliative interventions such as biliary or gastric bypasses when found to be unresectable intraoperatively.
Legend: NSCR (Nova Scotia Cancer Registry), HCN (Health Care Number), CHRD (Capital Health Radiology Department), PHRU (Population Health Research Unit, Dalhouse University).
Approval for this study identified as CDHA-RS/2012-206 was obtained from Capital Health Research Ethics Board Centre for Clinical Research located in room 322B, CCR at 5790 University Avenue, Halifax, NS B3H 1V7, Canada. This ethic review board supervises the good conduct of research projects performed by investigators with appointments at Dalhousie University. In addition, the protocol was also approved by all the ethic review boards (ERB) at each provincial health district where patients received their treatment. Besides Capital Health Research Ethics Board, other ERBs responsible for the approval of this study were: Annapolis Valley, South Shore and South West Nova Scotia, Cape Breton and Guysborough Antigonish Strait, Colchester-East Hants, Cumberland and Pictou Health Authorities19,20.
The quality of surgical care delivered to patients with PC was measured using QIs proposed by Sabater et al.17 and Bilimoria and colleagues11. Quality measures selected from Sabater’s study21 were: perioperative morbidity, perioperative mortality, overall 1, 3 and 5-year survival, number of lymph nodes reported within the surgical specimen and state of resection margins. The international classification of surgical pathologists was used to describe the involvement of resection margins with R0 margins meaning absence of cancer cells seen microscopically, R1 indicating that cancerous cells could be seen microscopically and R2 when tumor tissue was visible at naked eye on the margins at gross examination. Overall survival was recorded at 1, 3, and 5 years after surgery. All causes of death were considered secondary to recurrent disease and patients who were still alive at the closure of this study were censored. The only variation that occurred in reporting perioperative complications in this study was that adverse events were recorded only if satisfied grade III to V of Clavien-Dindo classification21 contrary to Sabater et al.17 who recommended reporting all grades of perioperative complications. QIs identified from the study by Bilimoria et al.11 were summarized in four domains: preoperative, operative, surgical pathology reporting and postoperative outcomes.
The quality of care of patients who underwent surgical resection of PC in Nova Scotia was compared to the mean and 95% confidence interval (CI) of QIs selected by Sabater et al.17. In their study, Sabater and colleagues17 performed a comprehensive search of practice guidelines, consensus conferences and reviews of pancreatic oncologic surgery and selected clinical relevant indicators of quality with weighted averages and respective 95% CIs. Comparisons between Nova Scotia and outcome benchmarks were performed using 95% CI for each of the QIs to test for possible statistically significant differences.
Overall survival analysis was performed using Kaplan-Meier methodology22. All statistical analysis was carried out using SAS® (Version 8.2, Cary, North Carolina). Two-tailed analyses were performed unless otherwise specified. Missing data were excluded except when imputation was possible from administrative data. All statistical analyses were considered significant at p<0.05.
Inclusion criteria were satisfied by 109 patients. Fifteen patients (13.7%) were excluded due to significant missing data. As a result, a total of 94 patients were included and represented the study population where the median age was 66.8 years, 41% were female, and 87% underwent a pancreaticoduodenectomy (Table 2).
Perioperative complications occurred in 25 patients (24.5%) (95% CI: 16.2–32.8%), and perioperative mortality occurred in 5 (5.9%) (95% CI: 2.2–10.5%). R1 resections occurred in 38 patients (37.3%) (95% CI: 37.2–46.6%) (Figure 2). The mean number of lymph node retrieved in each specimen was 9.0 (95% CI: 7.7–10.3) and the overall patient survival at 1, 3, and 5 years was 55.1% (95% CI: 45.2–63.8%), 18.5% (95% CI: 11.5–26.7%), and 9.4% (95% CI: 4.2–17.1%), respectively (Figure 2). When data from Nova Scotia were compared to values reported by Sabater et al.17, there were no statistically significant differences as 95% CIs overlapped between the two groups except for the mean number of lymph nodes identified in the pathology specimens and the rate of serious complications that were lower for patients operated in Nova Scotia.
The black squares and horizontal lines represent the references used to compare the outcome of patients who underwent surgical care in Nova Scotia (Red squares and lines). Statistical significant differences are present only if the horizontal lines representing 95% confidence intervals between the two groups do not overlap.
Assessment of other QIs proposed by Bilimoria et al.11 revealed that there was significant heterogeneity in the percentage of Nova Scotia patients who met the QIs across all four different domains (Table 3). For example, in the preoperative domain, 82% of patients had an appropriate cross-sectional imaging study within 2 months from the day of their surgery and 93% underwent treatment within 2 months after their diagnosis. On the other hand, only 33% of patients had 10 or more lymph nodes identified in the surgical specimen and only 24% had a complete TNM stage description in the final surgical pathology report.
QIswere grouped in four domains: preoperative, operative, surgical pathology and postoperative care. The number and percentage of patients who underwent pancreatic resections in Nova Scotia and who met the QIs proposed by Bilimoria et al.11 are reported in the right column.
In 2014, Statistic Canada12 published that in Nova Scotia, 5-year overall survival of PC patients was 4.7% in comparison to the national rate of 9.1%23. These results confirmed observations from other researchers who reported geographical variations in how PC patients are treated and differences in their overall outcomes. Variations treatments depend on multiple factors including physicians’ expertise, hospital resources, and patients’ characteristics. For example, other researchers have shown that patients who live in rural areas or who belong to lower socio-economic groups have worse outcomes when diagnosed with complex gastrointestinal malignancies or other chronic diseases13,14,24–26. This might be due to barriers to access hospitals or specialists, especially in countries where for-profit organizations play an important role in the delivery of healthcare. In Canada, these potential barriers should not exist as health care services are public and, ideally, equally accessible to all citizens.
In a previous paper11, our group suggested the possibility that the lower overall survival of PC patients living in Nova Scotia was due to differences in their socio-demographic characteristics when compared to other Canadian provinces14–16. Unfortunately, the data provided by Statistic Canada were not sufficiently granular to assess patients’ characteristics, and we could not exclude that patients diagnosed with PC in Nova Scotia received suboptimal care. Because of these concerns, we carried out an extensive epidemiological study that included all patients diagnosed with PC over a 10-year period in Nova Scotia with the main intent of assessing the quality of their care using established disease-specific indicators.
One of the main findings of this study was that a small proportion of patients underwent surgical treatment during the study period. In fact, among a total number of 1094 patients diagnosed with PC over a ten-year period, only 109 (9.9%) underwent radical surgery. This is in contrast to reports from other Canadian centers where radical surgery was feasible in up to 25% of referrals15. Our study, however, has shown that the quality of care of patients who underwent surgery was within the confidence intervals of benchmarks published by Sabater et al.17. In other words, there were no significant statistical differences in perioperative mortality, R1 resection rates and overall survival at 1, 3 and at 5-year after surgery between our population and the parameters used for comparison. Nevertheless, there was a trend towards higher perioperative mortality, and overall lower survival rate compared to the pooled data from the scientific literature.
When we analyzed the proportion of patients who met QIs in the four domains proposed by Bilimoria et al.11, we found that there were considerable gaps in the quality of surgical pathology reporting and utilization of adjuvant therapies. The quality of pathology reports might have influenced how patients were managed after their operation. In fact, patients with surgical pathology reports that did not mention positive resection margins or lymph node involvement were rarely referred to medical oncologists after their surgeries. The main reason was that in our institution, referral patterns, and medical oncological therapies were not unified and some providers perceived that there was no benefit for postoperative chemotherapy except for patients at high risk of recurrence (e.g. positive resection margins or positive lymph node involvement). Overall, only 53% of patients in our study were referred to medical oncology service for adjuvant therapy, and only 46% ended up to be seen by a medical oncologist.
This study has several limitations due to the retrospective nature of its design and the linking of multiple datasets that could have increased the risks of inaccuracy of the data as the primary purpose of these datasets was not for research16. Another important limitation is the small number of patients who were included. The overall number of inhabitants in Nova Scotia has been relatively stable with an estimated population of 930,000. Since the yearly incidence of PC in Canada is in the range of 8–11 patients/100,000 inhabitants18, we are confident that the majority of patients diagnosed during the study period were identified. However, the resectability rate was much lower than expected as the majority of referrals were unable to undergo surgery due to the advanced stages of the disease or the presence of severe comorbidities that precluded resections. Since surgery remains the only possible curative treatment for PC, the fact that less than 10% of patients were offered this opportunity raises the doubts that a considerable proportion was diagnosed late or not referred for surgical opinion in a timely fashion.
Despite the above limitations, our study is original and, to the best of our knowledge, it is the first to assess the quality of care provided to patients who underwent surgery for PC at a Canadian provincial level by using established indicators. Also, before this study, there were no reports on the resectability rate of PC in Nova Scotia or the overall 5-year survival of patients who underwent surgery.
In conclusion, patients diagnosed with PC and treated with radical resections in Nova Scotia had acceptable outcomes comparable to published international standards. However, we found that resectability rate was below average and a significant proportion of patients did not meet several QIs including preoperative radiological studies that were older than two months, incomplete surgical pathological reporting and, finally, a low referral rate and utilization of adjuvant therapy. Because survival of patients with PC remains disappointing, it is important to monitor for correctable deficiencies in the health care system. Our study suggests that, in Nova Scotia, there is need to increase early detection and early surgical referral, a more exhaustive pathology reporting and an increased use of adjuvant chemotherapy. A coordinated implementation of all these interventions might improve the overall survival of PC patients in the province. However, areas in which quality improvement strategies are most effective remain unknown and should be explored in future studies.
Nova Scotia's Personal Health Information Act, S.N.S. 2010, c 41 (PHIA), a provincial legislation which governs the collection, use, disclosure, retention and disposal and destruction of personal health information of patients treated in Nova Scotia, came into force on June 1 201319. The goal of this statute is to balance the privacy rights of individuals with respect to their personal health information and the need for researchers and practitioners to collect, use and disclose personal health information as part of providing strong healthcare services in Nova20. Due to restrictions imposed by PHIA, the raw data used for this study can only be accessible to investigators who obtain permission from Capital Heatlh Research Ethics Board Centre for Clinical Research and from the Nova Scotia Cancer Registry to use the encrypted database.
Investigators should submit their request to access the encrypted database used for this study to: Capital Health Research Ethics Board, Room 322, CCR, 5790 University Avenue, Halifax, NS, B3H 1V7, Canada.
Scott Hurton performed the statistical analysis of the data, performed a systematic review of the literature, wrote the paper and created the figures and tables reported in the manuscript. In addition, he manually searched medical records when data were missing for some of the patients who were included in this study.
Robin Urquhart, Cynthia Kendall, Margaret Jorgensen, Geoff Porter, Adrian Levy: Designed the protocol, assisted in linking all the different administrative provincial datasets used for this study and revised the manuscript.
Michele Molinari: Wrote the study protocol, obtained grant funding to support this study, performed a systematic review of the literature, co-wrote the manuscript.
This study was supported by a grant of $CAN 100,000 provided by Craig’s Cause Pancreatic Cancer Society, a registered Canadian Charity Society, Business Number: 842352759RR0001, webpage: http://www.craigscause.ca/.
The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
The authors would like to give a special thank to Stefanie Condon-Oldreive and Paul Oldreive (Founders of Craig’s Cause Pancreatic Cancer Society) for their generous support that provided all the necessary funds for this study. In addition, we would like to thank the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) for the grant given to Dr. Scott Hurton for his Master Degree studies in Community Health and Evaluation at Dalhousie University.
The authors would like to thank all the volunteers of Craig’s Cause Pancreatic Cancer Society for their generosity and fund-raising activities, and Dr. Mark Walsh and Dr. Brock Vair for they operated on many patients who were included in this study.
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Competing Interests: No competing interests were disclosed.
References
1. Sabater L, García-Granero A, Escrig-Sos J, Gómez-Mateo Mdel C, et al.: Outcome quality standards in pancreatic oncologic surgery.Ann Surg Oncol. 2014; 21 (4): 1138-46 PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full TextCompeting Interests: No competing interests were disclosed.
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