Between-hospital variation in mortality and survival after glioblastoma surgery in the Dutch Quality Registry for Neuro Surgery

Purpose Standards for surgical decisions are unavailable, hence treatment decisions can be personalized, but also introduce variation in treatment and outcome. National registrations seek to monitor healthcare quality. The goal of the study is to measure between-hospital variation in risk-standardized survival outcome after glioblastoma surgery and to explore the association between survival and hospital characteristics in conjunction with patient-related risk factors. Methods Data of 2,409 adults with first-time glioblastoma surgery at 14 hospitals were obtained from a comprehensive, prospect... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Hamer, Philip C. De Witt
Ho, Vincent K. Y.
Zwinderman, Aeilko H.
Ackermans, Linda
Ardon, Hilko
Boomstra, Sytske
Bouwknegt, Wim
van den Brink, Wimar A.
Dirven, Clemens M.
van der Gaag, Niels A.
van der Veer, Olivier
Idema, Albert J. S.
Kloet, Alfred
Koopmans, Jan
ter Laan, Mark
Verstegen, Marco J. T.
Wagemakers, Michiel
Robe, Pierre A. J. T.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2019
Reihe/Periodikum: Dutch Soc Neurosurg , Hamer , P C D W , Ho , V K Y , Zwinderman , A H , Ackermans , L , Ardon , H , Boomstra , S , Bouwknegt , W , van den Brink , W A , Dirven , C M , van der Gaag , N A , van der Veer , O , Idema , A J S , Kloet , A , Koopmans , J , ter Laan , M , Verstegen , M J T , Wagemakers , M & Robe , P A J T 2019 , ' Between-hospital variation in mortality and survival after glioblastoma surgery in the Dutch Quality Registry for Neuro Surgery ' , JOURNAL OF NEURO-ONCOLOGY , vol. 144 , no. 2 , pp. 313-323 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s11060-019-03229-5
Schlagwörter: Glioblastoma / Neurosurgical procedures / Quality of health care / Outcome assessment / Mortality / Survival / NEWLY-DIAGNOSED GLIOBLASTOMA / UNITED-STATES / TEMOZOLOMIDE ERA / ELDERLY-PATIENTS / PHASE-III / CARE / PATTERNS / RESECTION / OUTCOMES / GLIOMA
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29028242
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/11370/8823845c-49c8-48c1-b247-a2874d04d75b

Purpose Standards for surgical decisions are unavailable, hence treatment decisions can be personalized, but also introduce variation in treatment and outcome. National registrations seek to monitor healthcare quality. The goal of the study is to measure between-hospital variation in risk-standardized survival outcome after glioblastoma surgery and to explore the association between survival and hospital characteristics in conjunction with patient-related risk factors. Methods Data of 2,409 adults with first-time glioblastoma surgery at 14 hospitals were obtained from a comprehensive, prospective population-based Quality Registry Neuro Surgery in The Netherlands between 2011 and 2014. We compared the observed survival with patient-specific risk-standardized expected early (30-day) mortality and late (2-year) survival, based on age, performance, and treatment year. We analyzed funnel plots, logistic regression and proportional hazards models. Results Overall 30-day mortality was 5.2% and overall 2-year survival was 13.5%. Median survival varied between 4.8 and 14.9 months among hospitals, and biopsy percentages ranged between 16 and 73%. One hospital had lower than expected early mortality, and four hospitals had lower than expected late survival. Higher case volume was related with lower early mortality (P = 0.031). Patient-related risk factors (lower age; better performance; more recent years of treatment) were significantly associated with longer overall survival. Of the hospital characteristics, longer overall survival was associated with lower biopsy percentage (HR 2.09, 1.34-3.26, P = 0.001), and not with academic setting, nor with case volume. Conclusions Hospitals vary more in late survival than early mortality after glioblastoma surgery. Widely varying biopsy percentages indicate treatment variation. Patient-related factors have a stronger association with overall survival than hospital-related factors.