Abstract
Atypical endometrial hyperplasia (AEH) is the precursor lesion in endometrial carcinoma, the most common gynaecological malignancy in New Zealand, with inequities in disease burden and outcome for Māori and Pacific women. In women diagnosed with AEH at two hospitals, to audit five standards of care for surgical management and time-to-treatment, and identify variation in care by ethnicity and other factors. Demographic, referral, diagnostic and treatment characteristics were collected for women with a new AEH diagnosis between 1/1/2019 and 31/12/2020. Surgical management and time-to-treatment were audited against Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists and New Zealand Ministry of Health Faster Cancer Treatment recommendations. Of 124 participants, 60% were Pacific, 86% premenopausal, and 80% had obesity. For 55 women managed surgically, surgical standards of care were met. There were delays between referral, diagnosis and treatment - only 18% and 56% of women met the 62-day (referral to treatment) and 31-day (decision-to-treat to treatment) targets, respectively. Wait times were prolonged for women who had dilation and curettage (vs pipelle), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (vs no MRI), and surgery (vs medical management). Ethnic disparities were not identified for any standard. Delays to treatment were found throughout women's journeys. Hospital services can streamline their clinical pathways for women referred for abnormal uterine bleeding, flagging obesity as a high suspicion for cancer indicator, increasing access to endometrial sampling in primary care and establishing 'one-stop-shop' outpatient assessment with empiric initiation of intrauterine progestogen.
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More From: Australian and New Zealand Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
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