Bibliographic Details
Title: |
Commission on Cancer Center Performance with the New Breast Cancer Quality Measures: A Review of Historical Data. |
Authors: |
Fefferman, Marie L., Thompson, Danielle M., Wilke, Lee G., Hwang, Shelley, Bleicher, Richard, Freedman, Laura M., Meisel, Jane L., Kuchta, Kristine, Yao, Katharine |
Source: |
Annals of Surgical Oncology: An Oncology Journal for Surgeons; Mar2025, Vol. 32 Issue 3, p2045-2055, 11p |
Abstract: |
Background: Since 2022, the Commission on Cancer (CoC) has developed three new breast cancer quality measures (QMs): time to surgery (BCSdx) and radiation (BCSRT) and the use of neoadjuvant therapy for triple negative and HER2/neu positive breast cancer (BneoCT). This study assesses CoC center historical performance for these measures and facility factors associated with low performance. Methods: We examined the median number of days for time to surgery and radiation, and the proportion of facilities that achieved an estimated performance rate (EPR) of 70%, 80%, and 90% from 2004 to 2020 for all three measures. Multivariable logistic regression analysis was used to determine the association between facility factors and not achieving 80% EPR for all three measures. Results: The median number of days to surgery and radiation in 2004 were 16 and 43, respectively, compared with 34 and 48 in 2020 (p < 0.01). For BneoCT, BCSdx, and BCSRT measures, the proportion of facilities that attained ≥ 80% EPR was 68.5%, 72.2%, and 35.2%, respectively. The proportion of facilities that attained ≥ 80% EPR in 2004 was 92.3% for BCSdx and 49.8% for BCSRT compared with 69.6% and 39.4%, respectively, in 2020. BneoCT performance improved over time. Academic facilities and facilities serving a larger proportion of socioeconomically disadvantaged patients were approximately twice as likely to be unable to achieve compliance with all three QMs. Conclusions: Performance levels for BCSRT are the lowest of all three measures. Academic centers and centers with a higher proportion of Medicaid patients are more likely to have lower adherence with all three QMs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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Database: |
Complementary Index |