Eden Moore1,2, Barbara G Silverman2,3, Yehudit Fishler2, Etty Ben-Adiva2, Olga Davidov2, Rita Dichtiar2, Hila Edri2, Miriam Zatlawi2, Lital Keinan-Boker2,4. 1. School of Public Health, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA. 2. Israel Center for Disease Control, Ministry of Health, Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer, Israel. 3. Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel. 4. School of Public Health, Faculty of Social Welfare and Health Sciences, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Israel National Cancer Registry (INCR) was established in 1960. Reporting has been mandatory since 1982. All neoplasms of uncertain/unknown behavior, in situ and invasive malignancies (excluding basal and squamous cell carcinomas of the skin), and benign neoplasms of the brain and central nervous system (CNS) are reportable. OBJECTIVES: To assess completeness and timeliness of the INCR for cases diagnosed or treated in 2005. METHODS: Abstractors identified cases of in situ and invasive malignancies and tumors of benign and uncertain behavior of the brain and CNS diagnosed or treated in 2005 in the files of medical records departments, pathology and cytology laboratories, and oncology and hematology institutes in 39 Israeli medical facilities. Cases were linked to the INCR database by national identity number. Duplicate cases, and those found to be non-reportable were excluded from analysis. Completeness was calculated as the percent of reportable cases identified by the survey that were present in the registry. Timeliness was calculated as the percent of reportable cases diagnosed in 2005, which were incorporated into the registry prior to 31 December 2007. RESULTS: The INCR's completeness is estimated at 93.7% for all reportable diseases, 96.8% for invasive solid tumors, and 88.0% for hematopoietic tumors. Incident cases for the calendar year 2005 were less likely to be present in the registry database than those diagnosed prior to 2005. CONCLUSIONS: Completeness and timeliness of the INCR are high and meet international guidelines. Fully automated reporting will likely improve the quality and timeliness of INCR data.
BACKGROUND: The Israel National Cancer Registry (INCR) was established in 1960. Reporting has been mandatory since 1982. All neoplasms of uncertain/unknown behavior, in situ and invasive malignancies (excluding basal and squamous cell carcinomas of the skin), and benign neoplasms of the brain and central nervous system (CNS) are reportable. OBJECTIVES: To assess completeness and timeliness of the INCR for cases diagnosed or treated in 2005. METHODS: Abstractors identified cases of in situ and invasive malignancies and tumors of benign and uncertain behavior of the brain and CNS diagnosed or treated in 2005 in the files of medical records departments, pathology and cytology laboratories, and oncology and hematology institutes in 39 Israeli medical facilities. Cases were linked to the INCR database by national identity number. Duplicate cases, and those found to be non-reportable were excluded from analysis. Completeness was calculated as the percent of reportable cases identified by the survey that were present in the registry. Timeliness was calculated as the percent of reportable cases diagnosed in 2005, which were incorporated into the registry prior to 31 December 2007. RESULTS: The INCR's completeness is estimated at 93.7% for all reportable diseases, 96.8% for invasive solid tumors, and 88.0% for hematopoietic tumors. Incident cases for the calendar year 2005 were less likely to be present in the registry database than those diagnosed prior to 2005. CONCLUSIONS: Completeness and timeliness of the INCR are high and meet international guidelines. Fully automated reporting will likely improve the quality and timeliness of INCR data.
Authors: Gali Cohen; David M Steinberg; Lital Keinan-Boker; Or Shaked; Abigail Goshen; Tal Shimony; Tamar Shohat; Yariv Gerber Journal: Mayo Clin Proc Innov Qual Outcomes Date: 2020-04-06