Unplanned visits to hospital emergency for oropharynx patients undergoing radiation therapy in Ontario.

Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology(2014)

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267 Background: Radiation therapy (RT) with or without concurrent chemotherapy is the standard of care for patients with oropharyngeal cancer. The acute toxicity of treatment is well recognized and highlights the need for a multidisciplinary approach to management. In 2009, a Head and Neck Organizational Guideline was published by Cancer Care Ontario (CCO) which emphasizes the need for a multidisciplinary team approach of surgical, medical and radiation oncologists; supportive care professionals, including speech language pathologists, dieticians, social workers; and others to support the care of this population. In order to assess the availability of appropriate supportive care for this patient group, the percentage of patients who visited an Emergency Department (ED) during their course of RT and the causes for these visits were assessed.Patients with a diagnosis of oropharyngeal cancer receiving radical RT in Ontario (10 Cancer Centres) between the period of April 1, 2011 and March 31, 2013 were identified from CCO's Activity Level Reporting ( ALR ) database. These patients were then linked to the National Ambulatory Care Reporting System ( NACRS ) administrative dataset from the Canadian Institute for Health Information ( CIHI ) which allowed identification of patients that visited ED during their course of RT as well the reasons for the visits. Data on the use of concurrent chemotherapy was not available.Over the two year period, 885 patients in Ontario had radical RT (+ concurrent chemotherapy) for oropharyngeal cancer of which 261 (29.5%) visited an ED at least once during their treatment (range of 22% to 36% across the 10 centres). The main reasons for the ED visits were dehydration and neutropenia, although coding for reason of visit was incomplete in 16% of cases.The high proportion of patients attending an ED while receiving daily RT would suggest that the supportive care needs of this population are not being regularly met. Further work is necessary to understand the reasons for ED visits in this group of patients and the substantial variation seen between centres would suggest this metric may be useful as a new quality of care indicator.
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