Erschienen in:
01.03.2015 | Breast Oncology
Wait Times for Breast Surgical Operations, 2003–2011: A Report from the National Cancer Data Base
verfasst von:
Erik Liederbach, BS, Mark Sisco, MD, Chihsiung Wang, PhD, Catherine Pesce, MD, Susan Sharpe, MD, David J. Winchester, MD, FACS, Katharine Yao, MD
Erschienen in:
Annals of Surgical Oncology
|
Ausgabe 3/2015
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Abstract
Background
Few large-scale multicenter studies have examined wait times for breast surgery and no benchmarks exist.
Methods
Using the National Cancer Data Base, we analyzed time from diagnosis to first surgery for 819,175 non-neoadjuvant AJCC stage 0–III breast cancer patients treated from 2003 to 2011. Chi-square tests and logistic regression models were used to examine factors associated with delays to surgery and adjuvant chemotherapy.
Results
Seventy percent of patients underwent an initial lumpectomy (LP), 22 % a mastectomy (MA), and 8 % a mastectomy with reconstruction (MR). The median time from diagnosis to first surgery significantly increased by approximately 1 week for all three procedures over the study period. In a multivariate analysis, the following variables were independent predictors of a longer wait time to first surgery: increasing age, black or Hispanic race, Medicaid or no insurance, low-education communities and metropolitan areas, increasing comorbidities, stage 0 and grade 1 disease, academic/research facilities, high-volume facilities, and facilities located in the New England, Mid-Atlantic, and Pacific regions. In 2010–2011, patients who waited >30 days for surgery were 1.36 times more likely (OR = 1.36, 95 % CI 1.30–1.43) to experience a delay to adjuvant chemotherapy >60 days compared with patients who were surgically treated within 30 days of diagnosis.
Conclusions
Facility and socioeconomic factors are most strongly associated with longer wait times for breast operations, and delays to surgery are associated with delays to adjuvant chemotherapy initiation.