| Literature DB >> 29458403 |
Roberto Grilli1, Valentina Chiesa2.
Abstract
Health services overuse has been acknowledged as a relevant policy issue. In this study, we assessed the informative value of research on the quality of cancer care, exploring to what extent it is actually concerned with care overuse, thus providing policy-makers with sound estimates of overuse prevalence. We searched Medline for European studies, reporting information on the rate of use of diagnostic or therapeutic procedures/interventions in breast, colorectal, lung and prostate cancer patients, published in English between 2006 and 2016. Individual studies were classified with regards to their orientation towards overuse according to the quality metrics adopted in assessing rates of use of procedures and interventions.Out of 1882 papers identified, 100 accounting for 94 studies met our eligibility criteria, most of them on breast (n = 38) and colorectal (n = 30) cancer. Of these, 46 (49%) studies relied on process indicators allowing a direct measure of under- or overuse, the latter being addressed in 22 (24%) studies. Search for overuse in patterns of care did not increase over time, with overuse being measured in 24% of the studies published before 2010, and in only 13% of those published in 2015-2016. Information on its prevalence was available only for a relatively limited number of procedures/interventions. Overall, estimates of overuse tended to be higher for diagnostic procedures (median prevalence across all studies, 24%) than for drugs, surgical procedures or radiotherapy (median overuse prevalence always lower than 10%). Despite its increasing policy relevance, overuse is still an often overlooked issue in current European research on the quality of care for cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Low value care; Overuse; Quality of care; Review; Underuse
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29458403 PMCID: PMC5819192 DOI: 10.1186/s12961-018-0287-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Res Policy Syst ISSN: 1478-4505
Fig. 1Flow chart of the selection process of papers relevant to the review
Characteristics of the 94 European studies on patterns of care for breast, colorectal, lung and prostate cancer, published between 2006 and 2016
| Breast cancer | Colorectal cancer | Lung cancer | Prostate cancer | Miscellaneousa | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | |
| Year of publication | ||||||
| ≤ 2010 | 11 (29) | 7 (23) | 3 (38) | 4 (44) | 4 (44) | 29 (31) |
| 2011–2012 | 11 (29) | 8 (27) | 3 (38) | 1 (11) | 2 (22) | 25 (26.5) |
| 2013–2014 | 6 (16) | 13 (43) | 2 (25) | 1 (11) | 3 (33) | 25 (26.5) |
| 2015–2016 | 10 (26) | 2 (7) | 0 (0) | 3 (33) | 0 (0) | 15 (16) |
| Study design | ||||||
| Cross-sectional | 21 (55.3) | 8 (27) | 4 (50) | 4 (44) | 6 (67) | 43 (46) |
| Cohort | 17 (44.7) | 22 (73) | 4 (50) | 5 (56) | 3 (33) | 51 (54) |
| Data sources | ||||||
| Cancer registry | 17 (44.7) | 18 (60) | 6 (75) | 7 (77.8) | 1 (11.1) | 49 (52) |
| Cancer registry + administrative databases | 6 (15.8) | 1 (3.3) | 1 (12.5) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 8 (8) |
| Administrative databases alone | 8 (21) | 1 (3.3) | 0 (0) | 1 (11.1) | 2 (22.2) | 12 (13) |
| Other sources | 7 (18.4) | 10 (33.3) | 1 (12.5) | 1 (11.1) | 6 (66.7) | 25 (27) |
| Type of measures | ||||||
| Generic | 17 (44.7) | 16 (53.4) | 5 (62.5) | 5 (55.5) | 5 (55.5) | 48 (51) |
| Oriented towards underuse | 8 (21) | 10 (33.3) | 3 (37.5) | 1 (11.1) | 2 (22.2) | 24 (26) |
| Oriented towards overuse | 13 (34.2) | 4 (13.3) | 0 (0) | 3 (33.3) | 2 (22.2) | 22 (23) |
| Total | 38 (100) | 30 (100) | 8 (100) | 9 (100) | 9 (100) | 94 (100) |
aStudies including different types of cancers are in this category
Prevalence of overuse as reported in European studies on patterns of care for breast, colorectal and prostate cancer, published between 2006 and 2016
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| Wockel, 2010 [ | Germany | 2001–2005 | BCS in tumour size > 4 cm, in multicentric cancer, in inflammatory carcinoma | 4.4% (n.a.) |
| Axillary dissection in non-invasive carcinoma | 12.5% (n.a.) | |||
| Radiotherapy after BCS in invasive carcinoma | 4.1% (n.a.) | |||
| Chemotherapy in patients eligible to endocrine therapy | 8.7% (n.a.) | |||
| Claravezza, 2012 [ | Italy | 2008 | Adjuvant chemotherapy in luminal A patients | 38% (35–41%) |
| Poncet, 2009 [ | France | 1999–2003 | Trastuzumab in metastatic breast cancer without previous treatment with anthracyclines or in < her-2 negative patients | 68% (61–77%) |
| Lebeau, 2011 [ | France | 2003–2004 | Chemotherapy | 15% (13–17%) |
| Hormonal therapy | 9% (7–11%) | |||
| Mano, 2010 [ | Italy | 2007 | Axillary dissection in DCIS | 5% (3–8%) |
| Axillary dissection or sentinel lymph node procedure in DCIS or benign lesions | 33% (30–37%) | |||
| Kiderlen et al., 2015 [ | Germany, Italy, United Kingdom, The Netherlands, Switzerland, Belgium, Austria | 2008–2012 | Radical mastectomy in cancer ≤ 3 cm | 13% (n.a.) |
| ALND in DCIS | 4% (n.a.) | |||
| Ponti et al., 2007, 2011, 2015 [ | Italy | 2011–2012 | Axillary staging in cancers other than in pN0 | 10% (9–11%) |
| Axillary dissection in DCIS | 3% (2–4%) | |||
| Radical surgery in DCIS < 20 mm | 10% (7–12%) | |||
| Van de Water, 2012 [ | The Netherlands | 2005–2008 | RT in patients aged < 65 years | 6% (n.a.) |
| RT in patients aged ≥ 75 years | 4,5% (n.a.) | |||
| Chemotherapy in patients aged < 65 years | 2% (n.a.) | |||
| Endocrine therapy in patients aged < 65 years | 2.5% (n.a.) | |||
| Endocrine therapy in patients aged ≥ 75 yearts | 7.5% (n.a.) | |||
| Lu, 2011 [ | The Netherlands | 1989–2003 | Hospital visits in follow-up | 31% (28–35%) |
| Mammography in follow-up | 18% (16–22%) | |||
| Grandjean, 2012 [ | The Netherlands | 2003 | Consultations during follow-up | 55% (48–62%) |
| Mammography during follow-up after surgical treatment | 4% (1–7%) | |||
| Schwentner, 2013, 2012, 2012 [ | Germany | 1992–2008 | Surgical management, radiotherapy and chemotherapy in primary breast cancer | Only overall rates of guideline violation are reported, without distinguishing between over and under treatment Guideline violations were 8% for radiotherapy, 13% for surgical management and 16% for chemotherapy |
| Fong, 2012 [ | United Kingdom (region of Dundee, Scotland) | 2004–2004 | Endocrine therapy (comparing observed vs. optimal utilisation rate, predicted from guidelines recommendations) | 4% (n.a.) |
| Ponti, 2014 [ | Italy, Denmark, Czech Republic, Finland, Ireland, The Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Switzerland (it includes also patients from United States and Japan) | 2004–2007 | Axillary dissection in DCIS | 8% (7–9%) |
| Axillary dissection in low/intermediate grade DCIS | 5.6% (4.6–7.0%) | |||
| Axillary dissection after breast conserving surgery | 4.8% (4–5.5%) | |||
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| Bonifazi, 2012 [ | Italy | 2006–2007 | Bevacizumab use as second-line or advanced line in metastatic colorectal cancer | 37% (34–42%) |
| Adler, 2007 [ | Germany | Not reported | Diagnostic colonoscopy outside screening programme | 14% (11–17%) |
| Lepage, 2006 [ | France | 2000 | Excess of tests executed in pre-operative workup | 30% (26–34%) |
| Adjuvant chemotherapy in stage III | 5% (3–7%) | |||
| Eliot, 2014 [ | Sweden | 2000–2010 | Pre-operative RT (with or without chemotherapy) in early rectal cancer | 55% (50–60%) |
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| Hernes, 2009 [ | Norway | 2004 | Radical prostatectomy or Radiotherapy in low risk patients | 57% (52–61%) |
| Grundmark, 2012 [ | Sweden | 1997–2006 | Anti-androgen (bicalutamide) in low/intermediate risk patients | 2.1% (n.a.) |
| Evans, 2010 [ | United Kingdom | Not available | CT scan in diagnostic workup | 10% (7–11%) |
| Radical prostatectomy | < 1% | |||
| RT | < 1% | |||
| Hormone therapy after diagnosis of prostate cancer | < 1% | |||
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| Ray-Coquard, 2012 [ | France | 2010 | Erythropoiesis stimulating agents in chemotherapy-induced anaemia | Overall prevalence of overuse 5% in breast ( |
| Joerger, 2014 [ | Switzerland | 2012 | Anticancer drugs in several cancers, including breast, lung and colorectal | Results by cancer site reported only in graphic |
aStudies including patients with different cancers are in this category
ALND axillary lymph nodes dissection, BCS breast conserving surgery, DCIS ductal carcinoma in situ, n.a. not available, RT radiotherapy
Prevalence of overuse in European studies on patterns of care for breast, colorectal, lung and prostate cancer, according to type of procedurea
| Type of procedure | Prevalence (median) | Range | Number of measures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drugs | 15% | 2–68% | 14 from 12 studies |
| Diagnostic | 24% | 4–55% | 8 from 5 studies |
| Surgery | 8% | 3–57% | 13 from 7 studies |
| Radiotherapy | 5% | 4–24% | 5 from 4 studies |
aTwo studies [29–31, 42] not included as prevalence of overuse was neither explicitly reported, nor extractible from tables
Prevalence of overuse in European studies on patterns of care for breast cancer, according to type of procedurea
| Type of procedure | Prevalence (median) | Range | Number of measures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drugs | 8% | 2–68% | 8 from 6 studies |
| Diagnostic | 25% | 4–55% | 4 from 2 studies |
| Surgery | 8% | 3–34% | 11 from 5 studies |
| Radiotherapy | 4.5% | 4–7% | 3 from 2 studies |
aOne study [29–31] not included as prevalence of overuse was neither explicitly reported, nor extractible from tables
Measures adopted in European studies on patterns of care for breast, colorectal, lung, and prostate cancer, according to year of publication and to the conclusions drawn by their Authors
| Measures | Year of publication | Authors’ conclusions | |||||||||
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| ≤ 2010 | 2011–2012 | 2013–2014 | 2015–2016 | Total | No explicit statement | Underuse | Overuse | Under and overuse | Total | ||
| Generic | N | 16 (55.2) | 8 (32) | 12 (48) | 12 (80) | 48 (51) | 24 (69) | 17 (51.5) | 5 (41.7) | 2 (14.3) | 48 (51) |
| Oriented towards underuse | N | 6 (20.7) | 8 (32) | 9 (36) | 1 (7) | 24 (25.5) | 8 (23) | 16 (48.5) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 24 (25.5) |
| Oriented towards overuse | N | 7 (24.1) | 9 (36) | 4 (16) | 2 (13) | 22 (23.5) | 3 (8) | 0 (0) | 7 (58.3) | 12 (85.7) | 22 (23.5) |
| Total | N | 29 (100) | 25 (100) | 25 (100) | 15 (100) | 94 (100) | 35 (100) | 33 (100) | 12 (100) | 14 (100) | 94 (100) |
Box 1 Schematic representation of different possible rates of under- and overuse of procedures/interventions
| Procedure/intervention delivered | Rates | Questions addressed by the rates | ||
| Patient eligible to the procedure/intervention | Yes | No | ||
| Yes | A | B | B/A+B | How frequently did eligible patients fail to receive appropriate care? |
| No | C | D | C/C+D | How frequently were non-eligible patients exposed to the procedure? |
| Rates | C/A+C | B/B+D | ||
| Question addressed by the rates | How frequently has the procedure been delivered to non-eligible patients? | How frequently should patients not exposed to the procedure have received it? | ||
| OVERUSE | UNDERUSE | |||