Reuters Health Information: Multidisciplinary care tied to improved liver cancer survival
Multidisciplinary care tied to improved liver cancer survival
Last Updated: 2017-03-24
By Marilynn Larkin
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Curative therapies are more
likely to be prescribed when liver cancer patients are evaluated
by a multidisciplinary team of specialists such as
hepatologists, oncologists or surgeons, rather than general
gastroenterologists, researchers say.
Dr. David Kaplan of the Hospital of the University of
Pennsylvania in Philadelphia told Reuters Health that because
the study findings were derived from non-registry data, they
�likely better reflect the general care of liver cancer in the
broader community than those derived from academic centers, as
patients received care at high- and low-volume centers with
variable access to liver cancer expertise.�
�The data confirmed previous findings that nearly 24% of
hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients received no
cancer-specific treatments, largely due to significant hepatic
dysfunction, severe comorbidity, or highly advanced stage at
diagnosis,� he said by email.
�A key novel finding was that process of care - which
specialists the patient accesses and the number of specialists
seen - strongly impacted whether or not therapy was
administered,� Dr. Kaplan continued. �For instance, patients
managed primarily by general gastroenterology practitioners
rather than hepatologists were less likely to be actively
treated than those seen by an oncologist or surgeon, after
adjusting for liver disease and tumor-related factors.�
�Management of cases by general gastroenterology
practitioners tends to cluster at low-volume, non-academically
affiliated centers with less access to liver cancer expertise,�
he noted. �These data therefore support regionalization of care
to increase access of patients from low-volume centers to
expertise present at high-volume centers.�
�A second key finding was that specific components of the
management team strongly impact survival outcomes,� Dr. Kaplan
observed. �Seeing a surgeon increased the likelihood of curative
therapy and reduced mortality compared to patients who did not
see a surgeon.�
�While patients seen by a hepatologist were not more likely
to receive active therapy for their cancer, their risk of
mortality was 30% lower than patients not managed by a
hepatologist,� he added. �Multidisciplinary tumor board
discussion of case was associated with a 17% reduction in
mortality.�
Dr. Kaplan�s team analyzed data from 3,988 HCC patients (99%
male) treated at 128 Veterans Administration centers from 2008
to 2010 and followed through 2014.
They found that receiving care at an academically affiliated
VA hospital (odds ratio, 1.97) or a multi-specialist evaluation
(OR, 1.60), but not review by a multi-disciplinary tumor board
(OR, 1.19; 95%), was associated with a higher likelihood of
receiving HCC therapy.
Liver transplantation (hazard ratio, 0.22), liver resection
(HR, 0.38), ablative therapy (HR, 0.63), and transarterial
therapy (HR, 0.83; 95%) were associated with reduced mortality
during followup, the team reports in Gastroenterology, online
March 7.
Mortality was reduced when patients were seen within a month
of diagnosis by hepatologists (HR, 0.70), medical oncologists
(HR, 0.82), or surgeons (HR, 0.79), and when their case was
reviewed by a multi-disciplinary tumor board (HR, 0.83).
Dr. Kaplan concluded, �These data strongly suggest that
multi-specialist involvement that focuses on identifying
patients potentially curable by resection or transplantation,
and aggressive management of liver-related comorbidity, are
critical for optimizing outcomes for patients with HCC.�
Dr. Scott L. Friedman, Dean for Therapeutic Discovery and
Chief, Division of Liver Diseases at the Icahn School of
Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, commented, �The
incidence of HCC is rising faster than any cancer in the U.S.
and Europe, and this tumor is already the second leading cause
of cancer mortality worldwide. This study underscores the unique
challenges of caring for this neoplasm, which typically occurs
in the setting of advanced underlying liver disease.�
�More importantly,� he told Reuters Health by email, �it
reinforces the value of a multidisciplinary team to
expeditiously harness the most appropriate, advanced therapies
to improve patient outcomes.�
Dr. Friedman concluded, �Although the study�s findings are
somewhat limited by its retrospective, observational design and
its restriction to VA hospitals - i.e., only male patients in a
single national system - the report nonetheless solidifies the
importance of specialized, integrated care for optimal
management of complex diseases.�
The study was funded in part by Bayer Healthcare
Pharmaceuticals.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2mZDHKk
Gastroenterology 2017.
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