-
The European study on centralisation of childhood cancer treatmentGatta, Gemma ...It is generally agreed to centralise treatment of childhood cancers (CCs). We analysed (1) the degree of centralisation of CCs in European countries and 2) the relations between centralisation and ... survival. Patients and methods: The analysis comprised 4415 CCs, diagnosed between 2000 and 2007 and followed up to the end of 2013, from Belgium, Bulgaria, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands and Slovenia. All these countries had national population-based cancer registries and were able to provide information on diagnosis, treatment, treatment hospitals, and survival. Each case was then classified according to whether the patient was treated in a high- or a low-volume hospital among those providing CC treatment. A Cox proportional hazard model was used to calculate the relation between volume category and five-year survival, adjusting by age, sex and diagnostic group. Results: The number of hospitals providing treatment for CCs ranged from six (Slovenia) to slightly more than 40 (the Netherlands and Belgium). We identified a single higher volume hospital in Ireland and in Slovenia, treating 80% and 97% of cases, respectively, and three to five major hospitals in the other countries, treating between 65% and 93% of cases. Outcome was significantly better when primary treatment was given in high-volume hospitals compared to low-volume hospitals for central nervous system tumours (relative risk [RR] = 0.71), haematologic tumours (RR = 0.74) and for all CC combined (RR = 0.83). Conclusion: Treatment centralisation is associated with survival benefits and should be further strengthened in these countries. New plans for centralisation should include ongoing evaluation.Source: European Journal of Cancer. - ISSN 0959-8049 (Vol. 115, Jul. 2019, str. 120-127)Type of material - article, component partPublish date - 2019Language - englishCOBISS.SI-ID - 32425731
Author
Gatta, Gemma |
Botta, Laura |
Comber, Harry |
Dimitrova, Nadya |
Leinonen, Maarit K. |
Pritchard-Jones, Kathryn |
Siesling, Sabine |
Trama, Annalisa |
Van Eycken, Liesbeth |
Žagar, Tina, 1979-
Topics
rak v otroštvu |
redki raki |
preživetje |
centralizirano zdravljenje |
childhood cancers |
rare cancers |
survival |
centralised treatment
Shelf entry
Permalink
- URL:
Impact factor
Access to the JCR database is permitted only to users from Slovenia. Your current IP address is not on the list of IP addresses with access permission, and authentication with the relevant AAI accout is required.
| Year | Impact factor | Edition | Category | Classification | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JCR | SNIP | JCR | SNIP | JCR | SNIP | JCR | SNIP | |
Impact factor
Select the library membership card:
DRS, in which the journal is indexed
| Database name | Field | Year |
|---|
| Links to authors' personal bibliographies | Links to information on researchers in the SICRIS system |
|---|---|
| Gatta, Gemma | ![]() |
| Botta, Laura | ![]() |
| Comber, Harry | ![]() |
| Dimitrova, Nadya | ![]() |
| Leinonen, Maarit K. | ![]() |
| Pritchard-Jones, Kathryn | ![]() |
| Siesling, Sabine | ![]() |
| Trama, Annalisa | ![]() |
| Van Eycken, Liesbeth | ![]() |
| Žagar, Tina, 1979- | 25531 |
Select pickup location:
Material pickup by post
Notification
Subject headings in COBISS General List of Subject Headings
Select pickup location
| Pickup location | Material status | Reservation |
|---|
Please wait a moment.
