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SUMMARIES FOR PATIENTS

Relationships between the Amount of Colon Cancer Surgery a Hospital Performs and Patient Outcomes

21 October 2003 | Volume 139 Issue 8 | Page I-28

Summaries for Patients are a service provided by Annals to help patients better understand the complicated and often mystifying language of modern medicine.

Summaries for Patients are presented for informational purposes only. These summaries are not a substitute for advice from your own medical provider. If you have questions about this material, or need medical advice about your own health or situation, please contact your physician. The summaries may be reproduced for not-for-profit educational purposes only. Any other uses must be approved by the American College of Physicians.

The summary below is from the full report titled "Association of Hospital Procedure Volume and Outcomes in Patients with Colon Cancer at High Risk for Recurrence." It is in the 21 October 2003 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine (volume 139, pages 649-657). The authors are J.A. Meyerhardt, P.J. Catalano, D. Schrag, J.Z. Ayanian, D.G. Haller, R.J. Mayer, J.S. Macdonald, A.B. Benson III, and C.S. Fuchs.


What is the problem and what is known about it so far?
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Colon cancer occurs in the large intestine (colon). Treatment and outcome depend on the cancer stage. Surgery called colon cancer resection usually cures stage I colon cancer. Patients with stage II or III colon cancer need surgery for a chance to be cured, and patients with high-risk stage II cancer or those with stage III cancer also receive cancer-fighting drugs (chemotherapy). Treatment of stage IV cancer rarely leads to a cure, but it may help patients live longer than they would without treatment. How well patients with colon cancer do may depend a lot on the quality of the surgery they receive. Some studies suggest that patients who have colon cancer surgery at hospitals that perform many of these procedures (high-volume hospitals) live longer than patients who have surgery at hospitals that do fewer procedures (low-volume hospitals). However, these studies have looked only at deaths from any cause rather than at deaths specifically from colon cancer or at the frequency with which cancer returns after surgery (recurrence).


Why did the researchers do this particular study?
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To see whether patients who have colon cancer surgery at high-volume hospitals have fewer cancer recurrences or deaths specifically due to colon cancer than patients who have surgery at low-volume hospitals.


Who was studied?
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3161 patients with high-risk stage II or III colon cancer who were participating in a study of chemotherapy after colon cancer resection.


How was the study done?
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The researchers used Medicare data to classify each hospital at which a study patient had surgery as high, medium, or low volume. Next, they compared the percentages of patients at high-, medium-, and low-volume hospitals who were still alive 5 years after surgery, who were living but had colon cancer recurrence, and who had died specifically of colon cancer. All of these comparisons accounted for differences in age and other patient factors that could influence outcomes.


What did the researchers find?
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Five years after colon cancer resection, 63.8% of patients at low-volume hospitals and 67.3% of patients at high-volume hospitals were still alive. However, the percentages of patients who had colon cancer recurrence or who had died of colon cancer were not different for patients from high- and low-volume hospitals. The higher death rates of people who had surgery at low-volume hospitals were due to conditions unrelated to colon cancer or to colon cancer surgery.


What were the limitations of the study?
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Since all of the patients received chemotherapy as part of a study, this study cannot tell us whether patients cared for at high-volume hospitals get more appropriate overall colon cancer treatment than those at less experienced hospitals.


What are the implications of the study?
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Differences in cancer-related outcomes may not explain the shorter survival of patients with colon cancer who have their procedures at hospitals that do few of these procedures compared with patients at hospitals that do many. Patients who have surgery at less experienced hospitals may just be sicker than patients at more experienced hospitals.


Related articles in Annals:

Articles
The Effect of Clustering of Outcomes on the Association of Procedure Volume and Surgical Outcomes
Katherine S. Panageas, Deborah Schrag, Elyn Riedel, Peter B. Bach, AND Colin B. Begg
Annals 2003 139: 658-665. [ABSTRACT][SUMMARY][Full Text]  

Editorials
Does Practice Really Make Perfect?
Christine Laine AND Harold C. Sox
Annals 2003 139: 696-698. [Full Text]  

Summaries for Patients
Relationships between the Amount of Colon Cancer Surgery a Hospital Performs and Patient Outcomes
Annals 2003 139: I-28. [Full Text]  

Letters
Hospital Procedure Volume and Outcomes
Ashish V. Joshi AND Lesley-Ann Miller
Annals 2004 140: 1061-1062. [Full Text]  

Letters
Hospital Procedure Volume and Outcomes
Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt AND Charles S. Fuchs
Annals 2004 140: 1062. [Full Text]  

Letters
Correction: Hospital Procedure Volume and Outcomes
Annals 2004 140: 1063. [Full Text]  



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