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SAN FRANCISCO – Receiving adjuvant therapy for pancreatic cancer at a center that treats a high volume of patients with the disease confers a survival advantage, according to results of a retrospective cohort study reported at the symposium sponsored by ASCO, ASTRO, the American Gastroenterological Association, and the Society of Surgical Oncology.
The analysis of 245 patients found that those given adjuvant therapy at Virginia Mason Medical Center – a high-volume center seeing up to 300 patients with newly diagnosed pancreatic cancer each year and putting about a third of them in trials – had a 37% reduction in the adjusted risk of death when compared with peers referred to community clinics for this therapy, reported first author Margaret T. Mandelson, Ph.D., director of research and quality at the center’s cancer institute in Seattle.
“Our study does lend some support to the concept of using high-volume centers for all therapy components for pancreatic cancer that is treated with curative intent,” she commented. “Ongoing investigation of patterns of care and volume impact in medical oncology is certainly warranted.”
A variety of factors may be driving the observed survival difference, such as the regimens used, with some evidence suggesting, for example, that patients treated in the community are more likely to receive single-agent therapy, she noted.
“We know that we have a strong setting for supportive care [at the center] and that we try to maximize our patients’ tolerance to treatment,” she added. “We have a high rate of completion of treatment in this setting. And of course the impact of optimism and hope cannot be underestimated in this patient population.”
Giving the academic medical center perspective, Dr. James L. Abbruzzese of the Duke Cancer Institute, Duke University, Durham, N.C., speculated that volume is a proxy for processes of care: staffing, use of guidelines or treatment algorithms, staging practices, and especially a multidisciplinary approach with components such as tumor boards and use of clinical trials. And larger centers are in a better position to offer these processes.
“While the primary determinant of the long-term outcome of patients requires adequate volumes, I don’t think this is the whole answer,” he summarized. “I think it relies on and relates much more to the processes and the extent to which we can bring the multidisciplinary team to the patients.”
Giving the community oncology perspective, Dr. Michael V. Seiden, chief medical officer of the US Oncology Network, contended that instead of focusing solely on outcomes, the field should be focusing on the value of care, broadly defined as outcome divided by cost.
“I don’t really think this is a discussion about should your pancreatic cancer be treated in the community or in an academic center or a large regional health center. What we have to realize is that tens of thousands of patients with pancreatic cancer who will be diagnosed in the years ahead are going to receive care across the country in a lot of different venues,” he commented. “The questions we need to answer are how do we maximize value? What should be done in the ‘mouse’ hospitals? What should be done in the gigantic centers of excellence? What should be done in the well-organized health care systems? And what should be done in the community? Because delivering maximal value requires keeping an eye not only on best outcomes, but also on patient convenience and cost.”
Giving some background to the study, Dr. Mandelson noted that a volume-outcome relationship has been established when it comes to surgery for pancreatic cancer, but not when it comes to adjuvant therapy for the disease.
She and her colleagues used registry data to identify patients who received a pancreatic cancer diagnosis during 2003-2014 and underwent primary resection at Virginia Mason Medical Center. They compared outcomes between those who stayed at the center to receive their adjuvant therapy and those who were referred to a community oncology practice to receive this therapy.
Patients were excluded if they had received neoadjuvant therapy, had synchronous cancers, died or were lost to follow-up within 3 months of surgery, or had contraindications to receiving adjuvant therapy. Also excluded were any who declined this therapy and for whom a medical oncologist could not be identified.
Results showed that the patients treated in the high-volume center and in community clinics were similar with respect to sex, insurance status, travel distance to a high-volume center, performance status, and tumor size, nodal status, and margin status, Dr. Mandelson reported. Those treated in the community were, on average, 5 years older.
At the high-volume center, 96% of patients started chemotherapy, 81% received a multiagent regimen, and 53% underwent chemoradiation. Detailed data on therapies received were not available for the community group.
The patients treated in the high-volume center had a more than one-third reduction in the adjusted risk of death relative to peers treated in the community (hazard ratio, 0.63; P less than .01). Median overall survival was 43.6 months for the former, compared with 27.9 months for the latter (P less than .01). The corresponding 5-year rates of overall survival were 38.6% and 24.8% (P less than .01).
“We know from the literature that pancreas cancer is undertreated in the community as a whole, both from the surgical perspective and the medical perspective. So it wouldn’t be surprising if some of the patients with a referral to an outside oncologist in fact never received treatment,” Dr. Mandelson commented.
“The patient population that received surgery in the community setting and then came to Virginia Mason for adjuvant therapy has not yet been analyzed, which is essentially the inverse of this study,” she noted. “That will be very powerful evidence.”
Dr. Mandelson disclosed that she had no relevant conflicts of interest. Dr. Abbruzzese disclosed that he receives honoraria from Celgene and Halozyme, and that he has a consulting or advisory role with Acerta Pharma, Bessor, Celgene, Cornerstone Pharma, Daiichi Sankyo, EMD Serono, Halozyme, Progen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Sun BioPharma, and Viba Therapeutics. Dr. Seiden disclosed that he is an employee of McKesson Specialty Health and Texas Oncology; that he is chief medical officer of US Oncology; and that he owns stock in and receives travel expenses from McKesson Specialty Health.
SAN FRANCISCO – Receiving adjuvant therapy for pancreatic cancer at a center that treats a high volume of patients with the disease confers a survival advantage, according to results of a retrospective cohort study reported at the symposium sponsored by ASCO, ASTRO, the American Gastroenterological Association, and the Society of Surgical Oncology.
The analysis of 245 patients found that those given adjuvant therapy at Virginia Mason Medical Center – a high-volume center seeing up to 300 patients with newly diagnosed pancreatic cancer each year and putting about a third of them in trials – had a 37% reduction in the adjusted risk of death when compared with peers referred to community clinics for this therapy, reported first author Margaret T. Mandelson, Ph.D., director of research and quality at the center’s cancer institute in Seattle.
“Our study does lend some support to the concept of using high-volume centers for all therapy components for pancreatic cancer that is treated with curative intent,” she commented. “Ongoing investigation of patterns of care and volume impact in medical oncology is certainly warranted.”
A variety of factors may be driving the observed survival difference, such as the regimens used, with some evidence suggesting, for example, that patients treated in the community are more likely to receive single-agent therapy, she noted.
“We know that we have a strong setting for supportive care [at the center] and that we try to maximize our patients’ tolerance to treatment,” she added. “We have a high rate of completion of treatment in this setting. And of course the impact of optimism and hope cannot be underestimated in this patient population.”
Giving the academic medical center perspective, Dr. James L. Abbruzzese of the Duke Cancer Institute, Duke University, Durham, N.C., speculated that volume is a proxy for processes of care: staffing, use of guidelines or treatment algorithms, staging practices, and especially a multidisciplinary approach with components such as tumor boards and use of clinical trials. And larger centers are in a better position to offer these processes.
“While the primary determinant of the long-term outcome of patients requires adequate volumes, I don’t think this is the whole answer,” he summarized. “I think it relies on and relates much more to the processes and the extent to which we can bring the multidisciplinary team to the patients.”
Giving the community oncology perspective, Dr. Michael V. Seiden, chief medical officer of the US Oncology Network, contended that instead of focusing solely on outcomes, the field should be focusing on the value of care, broadly defined as outcome divided by cost.
“I don’t really think this is a discussion about should your pancreatic cancer be treated in the community or in an academic center or a large regional health center. What we have to realize is that tens of thousands of patients with pancreatic cancer who will be diagnosed in the years ahead are going to receive care across the country in a lot of different venues,” he commented. “The questions we need to answer are how do we maximize value? What should be done in the ‘mouse’ hospitals? What should be done in the gigantic centers of excellence? What should be done in the well-organized health care systems? And what should be done in the community? Because delivering maximal value requires keeping an eye not only on best outcomes, but also on patient convenience and cost.”
Giving some background to the study, Dr. Mandelson noted that a volume-outcome relationship has been established when it comes to surgery for pancreatic cancer, but not when it comes to adjuvant therapy for the disease.
She and her colleagues used registry data to identify patients who received a pancreatic cancer diagnosis during 2003-2014 and underwent primary resection at Virginia Mason Medical Center. They compared outcomes between those who stayed at the center to receive their adjuvant therapy and those who were referred to a community oncology practice to receive this therapy.
Patients were excluded if they had received neoadjuvant therapy, had synchronous cancers, died or were lost to follow-up within 3 months of surgery, or had contraindications to receiving adjuvant therapy. Also excluded were any who declined this therapy and for whom a medical oncologist could not be identified.
Results showed that the patients treated in the high-volume center and in community clinics were similar with respect to sex, insurance status, travel distance to a high-volume center, performance status, and tumor size, nodal status, and margin status, Dr. Mandelson reported. Those treated in the community were, on average, 5 years older.
At the high-volume center, 96% of patients started chemotherapy, 81% received a multiagent regimen, and 53% underwent chemoradiation. Detailed data on therapies received were not available for the community group.
The patients treated in the high-volume center had a more than one-third reduction in the adjusted risk of death relative to peers treated in the community (hazard ratio, 0.63; P less than .01). Median overall survival was 43.6 months for the former, compared with 27.9 months for the latter (P less than .01). The corresponding 5-year rates of overall survival were 38.6% and 24.8% (P less than .01).
“We know from the literature that pancreas cancer is undertreated in the community as a whole, both from the surgical perspective and the medical perspective. So it wouldn’t be surprising if some of the patients with a referral to an outside oncologist in fact never received treatment,” Dr. Mandelson commented.
“The patient population that received surgery in the community setting and then came to Virginia Mason for adjuvant therapy has not yet been analyzed, which is essentially the inverse of this study,” she noted. “That will be very powerful evidence.”
Dr. Mandelson disclosed that she had no relevant conflicts of interest. Dr. Abbruzzese disclosed that he receives honoraria from Celgene and Halozyme, and that he has a consulting or advisory role with Acerta Pharma, Bessor, Celgene, Cornerstone Pharma, Daiichi Sankyo, EMD Serono, Halozyme, Progen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Sun BioPharma, and Viba Therapeutics. Dr. Seiden disclosed that he is an employee of McKesson Specialty Health and Texas Oncology; that he is chief medical officer of US Oncology; and that he owns stock in and receives travel expenses from McKesson Specialty Health.
SAN FRANCISCO – Receiving adjuvant therapy for pancreatic cancer at a center that treats a high volume of patients with the disease confers a survival advantage, according to results of a retrospective cohort study reported at the symposium sponsored by ASCO, ASTRO, the American Gastroenterological Association, and the Society of Surgical Oncology.
The analysis of 245 patients found that those given adjuvant therapy at Virginia Mason Medical Center – a high-volume center seeing up to 300 patients with newly diagnosed pancreatic cancer each year and putting about a third of them in trials – had a 37% reduction in the adjusted risk of death when compared with peers referred to community clinics for this therapy, reported first author Margaret T. Mandelson, Ph.D., director of research and quality at the center’s cancer institute in Seattle.
“Our study does lend some support to the concept of using high-volume centers for all therapy components for pancreatic cancer that is treated with curative intent,” she commented. “Ongoing investigation of patterns of care and volume impact in medical oncology is certainly warranted.”
A variety of factors may be driving the observed survival difference, such as the regimens used, with some evidence suggesting, for example, that patients treated in the community are more likely to receive single-agent therapy, she noted.
“We know that we have a strong setting for supportive care [at the center] and that we try to maximize our patients’ tolerance to treatment,” she added. “We have a high rate of completion of treatment in this setting. And of course the impact of optimism and hope cannot be underestimated in this patient population.”
Giving the academic medical center perspective, Dr. James L. Abbruzzese of the Duke Cancer Institute, Duke University, Durham, N.C., speculated that volume is a proxy for processes of care: staffing, use of guidelines or treatment algorithms, staging practices, and especially a multidisciplinary approach with components such as tumor boards and use of clinical trials. And larger centers are in a better position to offer these processes.
“While the primary determinant of the long-term outcome of patients requires adequate volumes, I don’t think this is the whole answer,” he summarized. “I think it relies on and relates much more to the processes and the extent to which we can bring the multidisciplinary team to the patients.”
Giving the community oncology perspective, Dr. Michael V. Seiden, chief medical officer of the US Oncology Network, contended that instead of focusing solely on outcomes, the field should be focusing on the value of care, broadly defined as outcome divided by cost.
“I don’t really think this is a discussion about should your pancreatic cancer be treated in the community or in an academic center or a large regional health center. What we have to realize is that tens of thousands of patients with pancreatic cancer who will be diagnosed in the years ahead are going to receive care across the country in a lot of different venues,” he commented. “The questions we need to answer are how do we maximize value? What should be done in the ‘mouse’ hospitals? What should be done in the gigantic centers of excellence? What should be done in the well-organized health care systems? And what should be done in the community? Because delivering maximal value requires keeping an eye not only on best outcomes, but also on patient convenience and cost.”
Giving some background to the study, Dr. Mandelson noted that a volume-outcome relationship has been established when it comes to surgery for pancreatic cancer, but not when it comes to adjuvant therapy for the disease.
She and her colleagues used registry data to identify patients who received a pancreatic cancer diagnosis during 2003-2014 and underwent primary resection at Virginia Mason Medical Center. They compared outcomes between those who stayed at the center to receive their adjuvant therapy and those who were referred to a community oncology practice to receive this therapy.
Patients were excluded if they had received neoadjuvant therapy, had synchronous cancers, died or were lost to follow-up within 3 months of surgery, or had contraindications to receiving adjuvant therapy. Also excluded were any who declined this therapy and for whom a medical oncologist could not be identified.
Results showed that the patients treated in the high-volume center and in community clinics were similar with respect to sex, insurance status, travel distance to a high-volume center, performance status, and tumor size, nodal status, and margin status, Dr. Mandelson reported. Those treated in the community were, on average, 5 years older.
At the high-volume center, 96% of patients started chemotherapy, 81% received a multiagent regimen, and 53% underwent chemoradiation. Detailed data on therapies received were not available for the community group.
The patients treated in the high-volume center had a more than one-third reduction in the adjusted risk of death relative to peers treated in the community (hazard ratio, 0.63; P less than .01). Median overall survival was 43.6 months for the former, compared with 27.9 months for the latter (P less than .01). The corresponding 5-year rates of overall survival were 38.6% and 24.8% (P less than .01).
“We know from the literature that pancreas cancer is undertreated in the community as a whole, both from the surgical perspective and the medical perspective. So it wouldn’t be surprising if some of the patients with a referral to an outside oncologist in fact never received treatment,” Dr. Mandelson commented.
“The patient population that received surgery in the community setting and then came to Virginia Mason for adjuvant therapy has not yet been analyzed, which is essentially the inverse of this study,” she noted. “That will be very powerful evidence.”
Dr. Mandelson disclosed that she had no relevant conflicts of interest. Dr. Abbruzzese disclosed that he receives honoraria from Celgene and Halozyme, and that he has a consulting or advisory role with Acerta Pharma, Bessor, Celgene, Cornerstone Pharma, Daiichi Sankyo, EMD Serono, Halozyme, Progen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Sun BioPharma, and Viba Therapeutics. Dr. Seiden disclosed that he is an employee of McKesson Specialty Health and Texas Oncology; that he is chief medical officer of US Oncology; and that he owns stock in and receives travel expenses from McKesson Specialty Health.
AT THE ASCO GASTROINTESTINAL CANCERS SYMPOSIUM
Key clinical point: Patients with pancreatic cancer live longer if given adjuvant therapy in a center that treats a high volume of patients with this disease.
Major finding: The risk of death was lower for patients who received adjuvant therapy in a high-volume center, compared with peers receiving this therapy in community clinics (HR, 0.63).
Data source: A retrospective cohort study of 139 patients treated in a high-volume center and 106 patients treated in community clinics.
Disclosures: Dr. Mandelson disclosed that she had no relevant conflicts of interest. Dr. Abbruzzese disclosed that he receives honoraria from Celgene and Halozyme, and that he has a consulting or advisory role with Acerta Pharma, Bessor, Celgene, Cornerstone Pharma, Daiichi Sankyo, EMD Serono, Halozyme, Progen, Merck Sharpe & Dohme, Sun BioPharma, and Viba Therapeutics. Dr. Seiden disclosed that he is an employee of McKesson Specialty Health and Texas Oncology; that he is chief medical officer of US Oncology; and that he owns stock in and receives travel expenses from McKesson Specialty Health.