The Impact of Multidisciplinary Team Meetings on Patient Management in Oncologic Thoracic Surgery: A Single-Center Experience

the aim of this paper is to quantify multidisciplinary team meeting (MDT) impact on the decisional clinical pathway of thoracic cancer patients, assessing the modification rate of the initial out-patient evaluation. the impact of MDT was classified as follows: confirmation: same conclusions as out-p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancers 2021-01, Vol.13 (2), p.228
Hauptverfasser: Petrella, Francesco, Radice, Davide, Guarize, Juliana, Piperno, Gaia, Rampinelli, Cristiano, de Marinis, Filippo, Spaggiari, Lorenzo
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container_title Cancers
container_volume 13
creator Petrella, Francesco
Radice, Davide
Guarize, Juliana
Piperno, Gaia
Rampinelli, Cristiano
de Marinis, Filippo
Spaggiari, Lorenzo
description the aim of this paper is to quantify multidisciplinary team meeting (MDT) impact on the decisional clinical pathway of thoracic cancer patients, assessing the modification rate of the initial out-patient evaluation. the impact of MDT was classified as follows: confirmation: same conclusions as out-patient hypothesis; modification: change of out-patient hypothesis; implementation: definition of a clear clinical track/conclusion for patients that did not receive any clinical hypothesis; further exams required: the findings that emerged in the MDT meeting require further exams. one thousand consecutive patients evaluated at MDT meetings were enrolled. Clinical settings of patients were: early stage lung cancer (17.4%); locally advanced lung cancer (27.4%); stage IV lung cancer (9.8%); mesothelioma (1%); metastases to the lung from other primary tumors (4%); histologically proven or suspected recurrence from previous lung cancer (15%); solitary pulmonary nodule (19.2%); mediastinal tumors (3.4%); other settings (2.8%). MDT meetings impact patient management in oncologic thoracic surgery by modifying the out-patient clinical hypothesis in 10.6% of cases; the clinical settings with the highest decisional modification rates are "solitary pulmonary nodule" and "proven or suspected recurrence" with modification rates of 14.6% and 13.3%, respectively.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/cancers13020228
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MDT meetings impact patient management in oncologic thoracic surgery by modifying the out-patient clinical hypothesis in 10.6% of cases; the clinical settings with the highest decisional modification rates are "solitary pulmonary nodule" and "proven or suspected recurrence" with modification rates of 14.6% and 13.3%, respectively.</description><identifier>ISSN: 2072-6694</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 2072-6694</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.3390/cancers13020228</identifier><identifier>PMID: 33435181</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Switzerland: MDPI AG</publisher><subject>Biopsy ; Cancer therapies ; Histology ; Hypotheses ; Logistics ; Lung cancer ; Meetings ; Mesothelioma ; Metastases ; Metastasis ; Oncology ; Patient care planning ; Patients ; Standard deviation ; Surgery ; Thoracic surgery ; Thorax ; Tumors</subject><ispartof>Cancers, 2021-01, Vol.13 (2), p.228</ispartof><rights>2021. 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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central; PubMed Central Open Access
subjects Biopsy
Cancer therapies
Histology
Hypotheses
Logistics
Lung cancer
Meetings
Mesothelioma
Metastases
Metastasis
Oncology
Patient care planning
Patients
Standard deviation
Surgery
Thoracic surgery
Thorax
Tumors
title The Impact of Multidisciplinary Team Meetings on Patient Management in Oncologic Thoracic Surgery: A Single-Center Experience
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