BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: The diagnosis of paediatric cancer requires multidisciplinary cooperation to achieve both a timely diagnosis and efficient resource use. The authors undertook a 12-month audit of paediatric cancer cases to assess BC's Children's Hospital's (Vancouver, British Columbia) diagnostic process from the perspective of quality (timing and accuracy of diagnosis) and procedural efficiency, with an emphasis on the impact on resource use in the departments of radiology, pathology, anesthesia and surgery. METHODS: Malignancies (excluding brain and cortical bone primary tumours, for which the preoperative diagnostic workup is often completed before admission) diagnosed between January 1 to December 31, 2003, were reviewed. Data collected included total outpatient versus inpatient procedures, number and timing of diagnostic procedures, general anesthesia (GA) requirements, and lag times from admission to biopsy to diagnosis during the initial hospitalization. RESULTS: Fifty-four patients were identified. Only 10 patients (19%) had an outpatient diagnostic procedure. One hundred seventeen inpatient diagnostic procedures were performed, with only 50% occurring within regular working hours. Thirty-one per cent of patients required two or more procedural GAs during their initial hospital admission. The mean lag time to biopsy was 2.6 days and to a pathological diagnosis was 1.2 days. CONCLUSIONS: Despite timeliness, the process of cancer diagnosis at BC Children's Hospital requires hospital admission and a significant consumption of resources outside of regular working hours. Opportunities for improvement include maximizing outpatient workup, allocating oncology operating room time to increase the percentage of weekday procedures and improving interdisciplinary procedural coordination to reduce the GA requirements per patient.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: The diagnosis of paediatric cancer requires multidisciplinary cooperation to achieve both a timely diagnosis and efficient resource use. The authors undertook a 12-month audit of paediatric cancer cases to assess BC's Children's Hospital's (Vancouver, British Columbia) diagnostic process from the perspective of quality (timing and accuracy of diagnosis) and procedural efficiency, with an emphasis on the impact on resource use in the departments of radiology, pathology, anesthesia and surgery. METHODS: Malignancies (excluding brain and cortical bone primary tumours, for which the preoperative diagnostic workup is often completed before admission) diagnosed between January 1 to December 31, 2003, were reviewed. Data collected included total outpatient versus inpatient procedures, number and timing of diagnostic procedures, general anesthesia (GA) requirements, and lag times from admission to biopsy to diagnosis during the initial hospitalization. RESULTS: Fifty-four patients were identified. Only 10 patients (19%) had an outpatient diagnostic procedure. One hundred seventeen inpatient diagnostic procedures were performed, with only 50% occurring within regular working hours. Thirty-one per cent of patients required two or more procedural GAs during their initial hospital admission. The mean lag time to biopsy was 2.6 days and to a pathological diagnosis was 1.2 days. CONCLUSIONS: Despite timeliness, the process of cancer diagnosis at BC Children's Hospital requires hospital admission and a significant consumption of resources outside of regular working hours. Opportunities for improvement include maximizing outpatient workup, allocating oncology operating room time to increase the percentage of weekday procedures and improving interdisciplinary procedural coordination to reduce the GA requirements per patient.
Authors: G Ross Baker; Peter G Norton; Virginia Flintoft; Régis Blais; Adalsteinn Brown; Jafna Cox; Ed Etchells; William A Ghali; Philip Hébert; Sumit R Majumdar; Maeve O'Beirne; Luz Palacios-Derflingher; Robert J Reid; Sam Sheps; Robyn Tamblyn Journal: CMAJ Date: 2004-05-25 Impact factor: 8.262