4.6 Article

Influence of a patient navigation program on timeliness of care in patients with esophageal cancer

Journal

CANCER MEDICINE
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages 11907-11914

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cam4.5882

Keywords

esophageal cancer

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This study evaluated the impact of a novel patient navigation program on timeliness of care for esophageal cancer patients. The results showed that the program was particularly effective for patients undergoing multimodality therapy.
Background: Patient navigation (P.N.) is designed to eliminate barriers to care. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of a novel P.N. program on timeliness of care in patients with esophageal cancer.Methods: This retrospective study compared the timeliness of care for esophageal cancer patients before (January 2014-March 2018) and after the implementation of a novel P.N. program (April 2018-March 2020), called EDAP, at a tertiary care center. The primary outcome was time from biopsy to first treatment; secondary outcomes included time from biopsy to complete staging, biopsy to complete preoperative workup, and referral to the first point of contact. The outcomes were evaluated in the entire cohort and then in a subgroup of patients undergoing curative multimodality therapy.Results: There were 96 patients in the pre-EDAP group and 98 patients in the post-EDAP group. There was no significant difference between pre- and post-EDAP in the time from biopsy to first treatment and time from biopsy to staging in the overall cohort. In the subgroup of patients undergoing curative multimodality therapy, there was a significant decrease in time from biopsy to first treatment postnavigation (60-51 days, p = 0.02), in addition to a significant decrease in time from biopsy to preoperative workup and time from biopsy to staging.Conclusions: This is the first study demonstrating that a novel P.N. program for patients with esophageal cancer improved timeliness of care. The group of patients who benefited most were those undergoing curative multimodality therapy, likely given the extensive coordination of services required by this group.

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