Abstract

Objective: Extensive data published to date has demonstrated improved patient outcomes for adult cancer patients treated at high volume facilities. Unlike adult cancer care, however, the pediatric surgical patient is treated by a select group of experts at a limited number of facilities with greater standardization of protocols and centralized oversight. We sought to define the prognostic significance of hospital surgical volume on outcomes for two common pediatric surgical malignancies, neuroblastoma and Wilms tumor.

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