Could meeting the standards of the National Accreditation Program for Rectal Cancer in the National Cancer Database improve patient outcomes?

Author:

Brady Justin T.1,Bingmer Katherine1,Bliggenstorfer Jonathan1,Xu Zhaomin2,Fleming Fergal J.2,Remzi Feza H.3ORCID,Monson John R. T.4,Wexner Steven D.5ORCID,Dietz David W.1,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center Cleveland Ohio USA

2. Department of Surgery University of Rochester Medical Center Rochester New York USA

3. Department of Surgery New York University Langone Medical Center New York New York USA

4. AdventHealth Surgical Health Outcomes Consortium AdventHealth Orlando Florida USA

5. Ellen Leifer Shulman and Steven Shulman Digestive Disease Center Cleveland Clinic Florida Weston Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractAimThe National Accreditation Program for Rectal Cancer (NAPRC) was developed to improve rectal cancer patient outcomes in the United States. The NAPRC consists of a set of process and outcome measures that hospitals must meet in order to be accredited. We aimed to assess the potential of the NAPRC by determining whether achievement of the process measures correlates with improved survival.MethodsThe National Cancer Database was used to identify patients undergoing curative proctectomy for non‐metastatic rectal cancer from 2010 to 2014. NAPRC process measures identified in the National Cancer Database included clinical staging completion, treatment starting <60 days from diagnosis, carcinoembryonic antigen level measured prior to treatment, tumour regression grading and margin assessment.ResultsThere were 48 669 patients identified with a mean age of 62 ± 12.9 years and 61.3% of patients were men. The process measure completed most often was assessment of proximal and distal margins (98.4%) and the measure completed least often was the serum carcinoembryonic antigen level prior to treatment (63.8%). All six process measures were completed in 23.6% of patients. After controlling for age, gender, comorbidities, annual facility resection volume, race and pathological stage, completion of all process measures was associated with a statistically significant mortality decrease (Cox hazard ratio 0.88, 95% CI 0.81–0.94, P < 0.001).ConclusionParticipating institutions provided complete datasets for all six process measures in less than a quarter of patients. Compliance with all process measures was associated with a significant mortality reduction. Improved adoption of NAPRC process measures could therefore result in improved survival rates for rectal cancer in the United States.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Gastroenterology

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