The quality of surgical pathology care for men undergoing radical prostatectomy in the U.S.
β Scribed by David C. Miller; Benjamin A. Spencer; Rajal B. Shah; Jamie Ritchey; Andrew K. Stewart; E. Greer Gay; Rodney L. Dunn; John T. Wei; Mark S. Litwin
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 111 KB
- Volume
- 109
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-543X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
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 earlyβstage 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 patientβlevel compliance with surgical pathology report documentation of 7 morphologic criteria (ie, quality indicators). Applying the CAP prognostic factor classification framework, composite measures and allβorβnone 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], 50β58%) for pathologic tumor, lymph node, metastases classification (according to the American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system) to 97% (95% CI, 96β99%) for Gleason score. In composite, RP pathology reports contained 83% (95% CI, 81β84%), 85% (95% CI, 84β87%), and 79% (95% CI, 78β80%) 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, 48β56%) and 41% (95% CI, 37β45%) 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. Cancer 2007. Β© 2007 American Cancer Society.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
One hundred consecutive men with adenocarcinoma of the prostate, treated by modified pelvic lymphadenectomy and radical retropubic prostatectomy, were evaluated, comparing DNA ploidy as determined by flow cytometry to surgical tumor stage (pT), preoperative prostatic specific antigen (PSA), Gleason