Abstract

6046 Background: The NCCCP pilot is an initiative designed to enhance research and improve cancer care at community hospitals. As part of a multi-method evaluation of this pilot, we assessed changes in quality of care among the 16 pilot NCCCP hospitals over time (before vs. after program initiation) and in comparison to a group of 25 similar hospitals that did not participate in the NCCCP. Methods: We compared changes in 5 NQF-approved quality of care measures (3 for breast cancer, 2 for colon cancer) from 2006/07 (before NCCCP initiation) vs. 2008/09/10 (post-initiation) for NCCCP and comparison group hospitals. Data were collected from all study hospitals using the Commission on Cancer’s Rapid Quality Reporting System, which allowed near real-time tracking of quality of care process measures. Results: Analyses included 18,608 breast cancer and 7,031 colon cancer patients. Patient-level concordance rates for all 5 quality of care measures increased significantly among both NCCCP and comparison group hospitals. The change (from baseline to post-NCCCP) in quality of care among NCCCP hospitals was significantly greater than the change among comparison group hospitals for two measures: radiation therapy following breast conserving surgery (RT-BCS) and hormonal therapy for women with hormone receptor positive breast cancer (HT). For the RT-BCS measure, NCCCP patients from underserved populations also experienced significantly greater changes in concordance than did corresponding populations from comparison group hospitals. In multivariate regression analyses controlling for patient characteristics, the change for the HT measure among NCCCP hospitals was significantly greater than that among comparison group hospitals. Conclusions: While both NCCCP and comparison group hospitals showed improved quality of care, participation in the NCCCP was associated with significantly greater improvements for a subset of measures. Including a separate comparison hospital group was critical for assessing changes associated with NCCCP participation while controlling for broader U.S. trends in improved quality of care. Future work will examine how hospital networks may have facilitated improvements in quality of care.

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