| Literature DB >> 23989945 |
P G Corrie1, A M Moody, G Armstrong, S Nolasco, S-H Lao-Sirieix, L Bavister, A T Prevost, R Parker, R Sabes-Figuera, P McCrone, H Balsdon, K McKinnon, A Hounsell, B O'Sullivan, S Barclay.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Care closer to home is being explored as a means of improving patient experience as well as efficiency in terms of cost savings. Evidence that community cancer services improve care quality and/or generate cost savings is currently limited. A randomised study was undertaken to compare delivery of cancer treatment in the hospital with two different community settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23989945 PMCID: PMC3776975 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2013.414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1CONSORT flow diagram.
Patient baseline characteristics
| Randomised patients | 32 (33) | 32 (33) | 33 (34) | 97 (100) |
| CUH | 25 (78) | 25 (78) | 27 (82) | 77 (79) |
| WSH | 7 (22) | 7 (22) | 6 (18) | 20 (21) |
| No | 17 (53) | 16 (50) | 16 (48) | 50 (52) |
| Yes | 15 (47) | 16 (50) | 17 (52) | 47 (48) |
| 0 | 22 (69) | 21 (66) | 22 (67) | 65 (67) |
| 1 | 8 (25) | 9 (28) | 9 (27) | 26 (27) |
| 2 | 2 (06) | 2 (06) | 2 (06) | 6 (06) |
| Cure | 11 (34) | 10 (31) | 11 (33) | 32 (33) |
| Palliation | 16 (50) | 18 (56) | 17 (52) | 51 (53) |
| Supportive | 5 (16) | 4 (13) | 5 (15) | 14 (14) |
| Male | 11 (34) | 11 (34) | 11 (33) | 33 (34) |
| Female | 21 (66) | 21 (66) | 22 (67) | 64 (66) |
| Breast | 13 (41) | 11 (34) | 12 (36) | 36 (37) |
| Lung | 8 (25) | 10 (31) | 9 (27) | 27 (28) |
| Pancreaticobiliary | 9 (28) | 7 (22) | 5 (15) | 21 (22) |
| Other | 2 (06) | 4 (13) | 7 (21) | 13 (13) |
Abbreviations: CUH=Cambridge University Hospitals; GP=general practice; WSH=West Suffolk Hospital.
Community treatment: health professionals' concerns before starting the trial
| Patient safety concerns | A lot of outpatients are very anxious about things and they do take a great deal of security from the perception of being surrounded by quality and expertise …. | Oncologist |
| Patient safety concerns | It is infusion side effects and having the support available | Oncologist |
| Staff support | The nurses will be doing it in isolation, they can't ask anyone to come and have a look and it's quite nice often to run things past someone else. | Oncologist |
| Staff safety concerns (home) | If you are turning up to a not so great area in the dark … someone may think that you are carrying drugs in there that may be of value to them | Chemotherapy nurse |
| Staff safety concerns (home) | If something went wrong you are on your own, you've got no back-up whatsoever if anything happened | Chemotherapy nurse |
| Staff travel | What happens if we have a crash on the way to the practice? Or the vehicle breaks down? Where do we park? Do we have set parking and are we OK to park there? | Chemotherapy nurse |
| Resource concerns | You are paying for the nurses to go out and treat one or two patients in the community. These are very specialist, highly qualified nurses and some of the pool is being diluted by them going into the study. You are not maximizing what is actually a very precious resource | Oncologist |
| Resource concerns | An extreme waste of resources for one trained nurse just to treat two patients in an entire day. | Chemotherapy nurse |
| Financial | I cannot see the economics: it just does not make sense to train the number of nurses that we would need | Oncologist |
| Financial | I suspect it would be expensive, because you are going to have less productivity. I think the cost could be minimized over time getting things more fluid, getting things to move, but I think initially costs are going to be very high | Manager |
Quality of life scores for each of the study arms: comparison of means, adjusting for baseline
| EORTC QLQC30 emotional function domain | −7.2 (−19.5 to 5.2) | 15.2 (1.3 to 29.1) | −1.5 (−14.5 to 11.5) | −16.6 (−31.4 to 1.9) |
| EORTC QLQC30 self-rated health | 0.30 (−0.51 to 1.12) | −0.07 (−0.97 to 0.83) | 0.28 (−0.62 to 1.17) | 0.34 (−0.64 to 1.33) |
| EORTC QLQC30 self-rated QOL | −0.01 (−0.87 to 0.86) | −0.06 (−0.99 to 0.88) | −0.03 (−0.99 to 0.93) | 0.03 (−0.99 to 1.05) |
| HADS anxiety | 0.97 (−0.97 to 2.90) | −1.97 (−4.10 to 0.17) | 0.13 (−1.97 to 2.23) | 2.10 (−0.16 to 4.35) |
| HADS depression | 2.10 (−0.02 to 4.22) | −2.01 (−4.31 to 0.27) | 1.28 (−1.00 to 3.55) | 3.29 (0.81 to 5.77) |
Abbreviations: GP=general practice; HADS=hospital anxiety and depression scale; QOL=quality of life.
Group sizes are n=17 for hospital arm and n=23 for home arm. For GP arm n=17 (except 16 for self-rated scales and 15 for emotional function).
A sensitivity analysis estimating trends over time from 78 patients providing full or partial data post baseline, led to the following alternative estimates of baseline-adjusted effect (and P-value) for the primary outcome: Community Hospital: −5.7 (P=0.31); Home-GP: 13.1 (P=0.043); Home Hospital: −0.7 (P=0.82); and GP Hospital: −13.8 (P=0.043).
Cost per QALY, by study arm
| | | | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hospital | £2221 | £1831 | 0.174 | 0.034 |
| GP | £2497 | £1759 | 0.191 | 0.040 |
| Home | £2139 | £1590 | 0.165 | 0.053 |
Abbreviations: GP=general practice; QALY=quality adjusted life year.
Patient reflections
| Privacy hospital | I did find that a quite intimidating atmosphere to be in. You are very much conscious of the fact that there were a lot of sick people |
| Privacy hospital | When I first went in I thought well this is not very private at all…. actually as I sat and watched, I thought no, these people are sharing conversation with each other.. there was a kind of bonding that went on between the patients and that I remember thinking that it's been very, very well thought out and planned, so having seen that and thought this was fantastic |
| Privacy home | My daughter didn't want to see me having the chemotherapy |
| Privacy home | I know I sound a bit weird, but there is also the thing that if you are treating the cancer at home, then the cancer is at home |
| Convenience GP | I only came fourteen miles, but it took me an hour to get here, whereas it would have only taken me five minutes if I was at the GP |
| Convenience home | It is brilliant being at home just the only time taken up is the actual infusion, I don't have the 60 min journey into [hospital] and find a parking space and I don't have to sit around waiting in the reception for oncology… it's so much better for me |
| Financial hospital | Lots of hospital visits, makes car parking charges worse: twenty, thirty times a year is sixty to ninety pounds |
| Care quality | I don't mind. At the hospital, the health centre, you know as long as I get the chemo when I need it and the help I need |
| Care quality | In my opinion, the best would be from a selfish point of view the home visit, but from a practical point of view definitely for the [GP] outreach service rather than the [hospital] clinics |
| Care quality | I dread it [treatment in the hospital], you don't know which person you are going to get. Whereas if it is [name] and she is coming to the house, I feel reasonably relaxed |
Abbreviation: GP=general practice.
Changed views after the study
| The thing that has changed in my head about the community setting is about managing patient expectations. It's whether or not community care is perceived as more as a second class treatment option just by being in the community, or is it the same standard and that is about how it is branded and marketed.
The other thing that has moved or been challenged in my thinking is in terms of economy of scale: you still need a critical mass of nurses to deliver the care even to a critical number of patients and you have got to factor in travelling time which is down time. In order to create capacity we do need to have other options for delivering the service safely which comes down to how you market it. The other thing is, in order to make it cost effective you actually have to have the right kind of patients so it would make more sense if your shorter stay patients are seen in that kind of setting [GP surgery] at a high volume | Manager |
| When you go into it you are always a little bit sceptical but, having being there and done it I was very impressed about how it had been set up, I think it went much better than I had anticipated that it would. Those who got the chance really, really enjoyed it | Chemotherapy nurse |
| Before I started the trial I knew nothing about community chemo and now I feel I do and I think it is a good idea. I mean clearly there must be some situations and some patients who are so seriously ill that they may prefer the safety of the hospital at all times | Patient |
| Well, I know my pleasure with the home visit is purely selfish, I can understand it will tie up individual staff and reduce the amount of people that can be serviced if you like. It is an ideal thing one to one service but I don't think it is practical, you know, I mean I have seen it and I was really pleased that I was on the receiving end of the best option, but I honestly don't think travelling around the countryside is practical for the health service | Patient |
| Well, of course, initially, I was quite keen on being treated at home, but I have to say I think I have changed my mind on that, I am quite happy to go to the hospital, all the treatment is there, all the expertise is there, for me that felt more secure | Patient |