STS, ESTS collaborate to help improve lung cancer care

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A unique collaboration between The Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) and the European Society of Thoracic Surgery (ESTS) will help improve the quality of patient care by linking outcomes data on chest procedures, beginning with lung cancer surgery, according to an article in the January 2015 issue of The Annals of Thoracic Surgery.

"Our hope is that this collaboration will help identify best practices in lung cancer care in the US and Europe for better patient care worldwide," said Felix G. Fernandez, MD, from Emory University, who is spearheading the effort with Alessandro Brunelli, MD, from St James's University Hospital in Leeds, England. "This collaboration has the potential to serve as an exemplar for global standardization of data collection."

The project will utilize data from the STS General Thoracic Surgery Database (GTSD) and the ESTS Database. The GTSD is one of three components of the STS National Database, renowned especially for an Adult Cardiac Surgery Database (ACSD) that has become the gold standard for outcomes databases in the US. The ESTS Database was created as a joint activity with the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery.

Outcomes from both databases are risk-adjusted, which means that they take into account conditions that affect results, such as a patient's age and existing health problems. Risk adjusted outcomes are important to measure a facility's or surgeon's performance, as well as to identify which patients will be best treated by a particular procedure.

The first task for STS and ESTS was to standardize the definitions and terminology used within their respective databases. "That task represents a huge undertaking because it requires setting up a common language regarding collection of clinical information," explained Dr. Brunelli.

"By establishing a common language, we are combining our experiences to better understand each other's processes and outcomes, which will foster clinical research collaboration across the continents and disseminate important findings faster," added Dr. Fernandez.

STS and ESTS representatives have been holding informal discussions for several years, and during a recent collaborative process, common definitions were agreed upon by the two societies. Currently, members of the collaborative group are examining patterns of care and outcomes for lung cancer surgery from the two databases. Data and a draft manuscript have been circulated, and these outcomes will be the central topic of discussion at a gathering during the STS 51st Annual Meeting in January in San Diego.

"This project is particularly important in a specialty like thoracic surgery because we are a small community compared to other larger specialties. Increasing the pool of patient data on which to perform in-depth analyses is the only way we will be able to reliably assess our practices and produce robust guidelines to improve patient care and outcomes," said Dr. Brunelli. "Future collaboration and integration of our two databases could generate significant new knowledge and has the potential to boost quality of care initiatives on both continents."

Public Reporting of Surgical Outcomes
In addition to the collaboration with ESTS, STS is preparing for another milestone with the GTSD—public reporting. In early 2016, GTSD participants will have the opportunity to publicly report, on a voluntary basis, outcomes on lobectomy. ACSD outcomes have been publicly reported since 2010 and have evolved to include coronary artery bypass grafting surgery (CABG), aortic valve replacement (AVR), and AVR with CABG. Additionally, 25 Congenital Heart Surgery Database participants have signed up to publicly report their risk-adjusted operative mortality results in January 2015.

Comments

  1. Betsy Thompson Betsy Thompson United States says:

    I don't know who attached the picture of lungs filled w/ cigarettes to this article's link that highlights "improving lung cancer care"; but  I'd recommend you remove that damning photo, as it's images like that, that kill lung cancer patients faster than any cancer can.
    I don't imagine any reputable Society of Thoracic Surgeons would be endorsing that picture either.

  2. Mary McKenney Mary McKenney United States says:

    This picture of snuffed out cigarettes over a an X-ray of lungs is absolutely DISGUSTING!!!!  I am a stage lV lung cancer survivor who never smoked and I am among the thousands in the same situation!  Don't you know yet that if you have lungs, you can get lung cancer?!  We now know that it is just the location that the cancer cells decided (with no help of invitation from us!) to divide and multiply!  Please remove any such pictures indicating that the only way to get lung cancer is by smoking.  The stigma it creates ("they brought it on themselves") is why lung cancer is the least funded cancer, yet the number 1 killer! You are contributing to that stigma.

  3. Betsy Thompson Betsy Thompson United States says:

    Please remove the offensive, misrepresentative picture of Lungs filled with cigarette butts that is attached to this article. It appears whenever this link is posted or shared. This image creates a negative profile against a diseased & often disabled,targeted population. This is discriminatory and illegal. Thank you. Betsy Thompson

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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