Abstract
In Canada, after completing their treatment at oncology centers in tertiary care facilities, most breast cancer patients are discharged and receive survivorship care from primary care providers (PCPs). Evidence-based guidelines exist to inform appropriate care for breast cancer survivor follow-up. This study analyzed the concordance of breast cancer survivorship follow-up care by PCPs with recommended guidelines at an academic Family Health Team (FHT) in Ottawa. Retrospective chart review of electronic medical records of rostered patients from FHT. Data was extracted from the charts of 60 breast cancer survivors. Concordance of breast cancer survivorship care by PCPs with evidence-based guidelines was established in three key survivorship domains: surveillance for recurrence or new cancers, management of treatment side effects and preventative health. PCPs provide care concordant with guidelines only 20% of the time, with areas such as preventative care at 86.7% concordance far better than management of side effects at 58.3% and oncological surveillance at 38.3%. Care did not significantly differ by age at diagnosis. These results highlight gaps in the current survivorship care delivery and function as a baseline for comparative analyses for future interventions to optimize survivorship follow-up care.
Published Version
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