Clinical decisions in pancreatic cancer surgery: a national survey and case-vignette study.
Jose Manuel RamiaEsteban CugatRoberto De la PlazaMiguel A Gomez-BravoElena MartínLuis Muñoz-BellvisFrancisco J PadilloLuis SabaterMario Serradilla-MartínPublished in: Updates in surgery (2022)
Very few surveys have been carried out of oncosurgical decisions made in patients with pancreatic cancer (PC), or of the possible differences in therapeutic approaches between low/medium and high-volume centers. A survey was sent out to centers affiliated to the Spanish Group of Pancreatic Surgery (GECP) asking about their usual pre-, intra- and post-operative management of PC patients and describing five imaginary cases of PC corresponding to common scenarios that surgeons regularly assess in oncosurgical meetings. A consensus was considered to have been reached when 80% of the answers coincided. We received 69 responses from the 72 GECP centers (response rate 96%). Pre-operative management: consensus was obtained on 7/16 questions (43.75%) with no significant differences between low- vs high-volume centers. Intra-operative: consensus was obtained on 11/28 questions (39.3%). D2 lymphadenectomy, biliary culture, intra-operative biliary margin study, pancreatojejunostomy, and two loops were significantly more frequent in high-volume hospitals (p < 0.05). Post-operative: consensus was obtained on 2/8 questions (25%). No significant differences were found between low-/medium- vs high-volume hospitals. Of the 41 questions asked regarding the cases, consensus was reached on 22 (53.7%). No differences in the responses were found according to the type of hospital. Management and cases: consensus was reached in 42/93 questions (45.2%). At GECP centers, consensus was obtained on 45% of the questions. Only 5% of the answers differed between low/medium and high-volume centers (all intra-operative). A more specific assessment of why high-volume centers obtain the best results would require the design of complex prospective studies able to measure the therapeutic decisions made and the effectiveness of their execution. Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT04755036.
Keyphrases
- clinical practice
- healthcare
- minimally invasive
- systematic review
- end stage renal disease
- randomized controlled trial
- climate change
- chronic kidney disease
- radiation therapy
- ejection fraction
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- prognostic factors
- coronary artery disease
- cross sectional
- lymph node metastasis
- sentinel lymph node
- rectal cancer