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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To estimate trends in hospital volume and referral patterns for women with uterine and ovarian cancer.
METHODS: The Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End
Results-Medicare database was used to identify women aged 65 years or
older with ovarian and uterine cancer who underwent surgery from 2000 to
2007. "Volume creep," when a greater number of patients undergo surgery
at the same hospitals, and "market concentration," when a similar
overall number of patients undergo a procedure but at a smaller number
of hospitals, were analyzed.
RESULTS: Among 4,522 patients with ovarian cancer, mean
hospital volume increased from 3.1 cases during 2000-2001 to 3.4 cases
during 2006-2007 (P=.62) suggesting minimal volume creep. Similarly,
there was little evidence of market concentration. In 2000-2001, 37.8%
of women were treated at the top decile by volume hospitals compared
with 41.4% in 2006-2007 (P=.14). In 2006-2007, 201 (63.2%) of the
hospitals had an ovarian cancer surgery volume of two or fewer cases.
Among 9,908 women with uterine cancer, the mean hospital volume
increased slightly from 4.5 in 2000-2001 to 5.4 in 2006-2007 (P=.10).
The percentage of patients treated at the top decile by volume of
hospitals increased from 40.4% in 2000-2001 to 44.7% in 2006-2007
(P<.001). In 2006-2007, 243 (49.3%) of the hospitals had a uterine
cancer surgery volume of two or fewer cases.
CONCLUSION: There have been only modest changes in the
referral patterns of women with ovarian and uterine cancer. A large
number of hospitals have a very low procedural volume.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II
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