Back to Search Start Over

Effectiveness of Implemented Interventions on Pathologic Nodal Staging of Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Authors :
David M. Spencer
Matthew P. Smeltzer
Vishal Sachdev
Todd Robbins
P. Levy
Carrie Fehnel
Raymond U. Osarogiagbon
Nicholas Faris
Cheryl Houston-Harris
Lynn Wiggins
Meredith Ray
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Accurate pathologic nodal staging improves early-stage non-small-cell lung cancer survival. In an ongoing implementation study, we measured the impact of a surgical lymph node specimen collection kit and a more thorough pathologic gross dissection method, on attainment of guideline-recommended pathologic nodal staging quality. METHODS: We prospectively collected data on curative-intent non-small cell lung cancer resections from 2009–2016 from 11 hospitals in 4 contiguous Dartmouth Hospital Referral Regions. We categorized patients into 4 groups based on exposure to the two interventions in our staggered implementation study design. We used Chi-squared tests to examine the differences in demographic and disease characteristics and surgical quality criteria across implementation groups. RESULTS: Of 2,469 patients, 1,615 (65%) received neither intervention; 167 (7%) received only the pathology intervention; 264 (11%) received only the surgery intervention; 423 (17%) had both. Rates of non-examination of lymph nodes reduced sequentially in the order of no intervention, novel dissection, kit, and combined interventions, including non-examination of: any lymph nodes, hilar/intrapulmonary and mediastinal nodes (p

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....737a32bac0badad06538fe4737ac9b1a