1. Analysing the attributes of Comprehensive Cancer Centres and Cancer Centres across Europe to identify key hallmarks
- Author
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Irène Philip, Francesco Monetti, Femke Boomsma, Dominique de Valeriola, Marek Svoboda, Gordon McVie, Sebastian Kehrloesser, Mahasti Saghatchian, Wim H. van Harten, Thierry Philip, Péter Nagy, Paolo De Paoli, Anke Wind, Gunnar Sæter, József Lövey, Marjet M. Docter, Harriët H. Blaauwgeers, Willien Westerhuis, Jean Benoit Burrion, Eva Gustafsson, Claudio Lombardo, Astrid Wendler, Henk Hummel, Simon Oberst, Renée Otter, Health Technology & Services Research, Oberst, Simon [0000-0002-1139-2578], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biomedical Research ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Qualitative property ,Translational research ,Cancer Care Facilities ,Medical Oncology ,accreditation ,multidisciplinarity ,Cohort Studies ,Translational Research, Biomedical ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Neoplasms ,Patient-Centered Care ,Genetics ,medicine ,quality standard ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,RC254-282 ,Accreditation ,media_common ,Quality of Health Care ,Patient Care Team ,clinical trials ,comprehensive cancer center ,Corporate governance ,Academies and Institutes ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Cancer ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Clinical trial ,Europe ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,translational research ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Policy Article ,Molecular Medicine ,Business - Abstract
There is a persistent variation in cancer outcomes among and within European countries suggesting (among other causes) inequalities in access to or delivery of high‐quality cancer care. European policy (EU Cancer Mission and Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan) is currently moving towards a mission‐oriented approach addressing these inequalities. In this study, we used the quantitative and qualitative data of the Organisation of European Cancer Institutes’ Accreditation and Designation Programme, relating to 40 large European cancer centres, to describe their current compliance with quality standards, to identify the hallmarks common to all centres and to show the distinctive features of Comprehensive Cancer Centres. All Comprehensive Cancer Centres and Cancer Centres accredited by the Organisation of European Cancer Institutes show good compliance with quality standards related to care, multidisciplinarity and patient centredness. However, Comprehensive Cancer Centres on average showed significantly better scores on indicators related to the volume, quality and integration of translational research, such as high‐impact publications, clinical trial activity (especially in phase I and phase IIa trials) and filing more patents as early indicators of innovation. However, irrespective of their size, centres show significant variability regarding effective governance when functioning as entities within larger hospitals., This study reveals the attributes of cancer centres based on data from 40 large European cancer centres, showing that Comprehensive Cancer Centres have significantly greater output of peer‐reviewed publications and clinical trials than other centres, and that the quality of multidisciplinarity is well established in all accredited cancer centres.
- Published
- 2021