Cancer care quality measures: diagnosis and treatment of colorectal cancer.

Meenal B Patwardhan, Gregory P Samsa, Douglas C McCrory, Deborah A Fisher, Christopher R Mantyh, Michael A Morse, Robert G Prosnitz, Kathryn E Cline, Rebecca N Gray
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Abstract

Objectives: To identify measures that are currently available to assess the quality of care provided to patients with colorectal cancer (CRC), and to assess the extent to which these measures have been developed and tested.

Data sources: Published and unpublished measures identified through a computerized search of English-language citations in MEDLINE (1966-January 2005), the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and the National Guideline Clearinghouse; through review of reference lists contained in seed articles, all included articles, and relevant review articles; and through searches of the grey literature (institutional or government reports, professional society documents, research papers, and other literature, in print or electronic format, not controlled by commercial publishing interests). Sources for grey literature included professional organization websites and the Internet.

Review methods: Measures were selected by reviewers according to standardized criteria relating to each question, and were then rated according to their importance and usability, scientific acceptability, and extent of testing; each domain was rated from 1 (poor) to 5 (ideal).

Results: We identified a number of well-developed and well-tested CRC-related quality-of-care measures, both general process-of-care measures (on a broader scale) and technical measures (pertaining to specific details of a procedure). At least some process measures are available for diagnostic imaging, staging, surgical therapy, adjuvant chemotherapy, adjuvant radiation therapy, and colonoscopic surveillance. Various technical measures were identified for quality of colonoscopy (e.g., cecal intubation rate, complications) and staging (adequate lymph node retrieval and evaluation). These technical measures were guideline-based and well developed, but less well tested, and the linkage between them and patient outcomes, although intuitive, was not always explicitly provided. For some elements of the care pathway, such as operative reports and chemotherapy reports, no technical measures were found.

Conclusions: Some general process measures have a stronger evidence base than others. Those based on guidelines have the strongest evidence base; those derived from basic first principles supported by some research findings are relatively weaker, but are often sufficient for the task at hand. A consistent source of tension is the distinction between the clinically derived fine-tuning of the definition of a quality measure and the limitations of available data sources (which often do not contain sufficient information to act on such distinctions). Although some excellent technical measures were found, the overall development of technical measures seems less advanced than that of the general process measures.

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癌症护理质量措施:结直肠癌的诊断和治疗。
目的:确定目前可用于评估为结直肠癌(CRC)患者提供的护理质量的措施,并评估这些措施的开发和测试程度。数据来源:通过计算机搜索MEDLINE(1966- 2005年1月)、Cochrane系统评价数据库和国家指南信息中心的英文引文,确定已发表和未发表的措施;通过查阅种子文章中包含的参考文献列表、所有被收录的文章以及相关的综述文章;并通过搜索灰色文献(机构或政府报告,专业协会文件,研究论文和其他文献,印刷或电子格式,不受商业出版利益控制)。灰色文献的来源包括专业组织网站和互联网。评审方法:由评审人员根据与每个问题相关的标准化标准选择措施,然后根据其重要性和可用性、科学可接受性和测试程度进行评分;每个领域的评分从1(差)到5(理想)。结果:我们确定了许多发展良好且经过良好测试的crc相关护理质量措施,包括一般护理过程措施(在更广泛的范围内)和技术措施(与程序的具体细节有关)。至少有一些过程测量可用于诊断成像、分期、手术治疗、辅助化疗、辅助放射治疗和结肠镜监测。确定了结肠镜检查质量(如盲肠插管率、并发症)和分期(充分的淋巴结检索和评估)的各种技术措施。这些技术措施以指南为基础,发展良好,但缺乏良好的测试,它们与患者结果之间的联系虽然直观,但并不总是明确提供。对于一些护理途径的要素,如手术报告和化疗报告,没有找到技术措施。结论:一些一般的过程措施比其他措施有更强的证据基础。以指南为基础的建议具有最有力的证据基础;那些由一些研究结果支持的基本第一原理推导出来的理论相对较弱,但对于手头的任务来说往往足够了。一个一致的紧张来源是质量测量定义的临床微调与可用数据源的限制之间的区别(这些数据源通常不包含对这种区别采取行动的足够信息)。虽然发现了一些优秀的技术措施,但技术措施的整体发展似乎不如一般工艺措施先进。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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