Investigator

Jolyce Bourgeois

Belgian Health Care Knowledge Centre

JBJolyce Bourgeois
Papers(1)
Quality of surgery an…
Collaborators(5)
Leen VerleyeMathieu LuyckxCindy De GendtGeert SilversmitIsabelle Savoye
Institutions(3)
Belgian Health Care K…UCLouvainBelgian Cancer Regist…

Papers

Quality of surgery and treatment and its association with hospital volume: A population-based study in more than 5000 Belgian ovarian cancer patients

Different sets of quality indicators are used to identify areas for improvement in ovarian cancer care. This study reports transparently on how (surgical) indicators were measured and on the association between hospital volume and indicator results in Belgium, a country setting without any centralisation of ovarian cancer care. From the population-based Belgian Cancer Registry, patients with a borderline malignant or invasive epithelial ovarian tumour diagnosed between 2014 and 2018 were selected and linked to health insurance and vital status data (n = 5119). Thirteen quality indicators on diagnosis and treatment were assessed and the association with hospital volume was analysed using logistic regression adjusted for case-mix. The national results for most quality indicators on diagnosis and systemic therapy were around the predefined target value. Other indicators showed results below the benchmark: genetic testing, completeness of staging surgery, lymphadenectomy with at least 20 pelvic/para-aortic lymph nodes removed, and timely start of chemotherapy after surgery (within 42 days). Ovarian cancer care in Belgium is dispersed over 100 hospitals. Lower volume hospitals showed poorer indicator results compared to higher volume hospitals for lymphadenectomy, staging, timely start of chemotherapy and genetic testing. In addition, surgery for advanced stage tumours was performed less often in lower volume hospitals. The indicators that showed poorer results on a national level were also those with poorer results in lower-volume hospitals compared to higher-volume hospitals, consequently supporting centralisation. International benchmarking is hampered by different (surgical) definitions between countries and studies.

57Works
1Papers
5Collaborators

Positions

2018–

Researcher

Belgian Health Care Knowledge Centre

2015–

Researcher

Federale Overheidsdienst Volksgezondheid Veiligheid van de Voedselketen en Leefmilieu · Organisation of Health care

2010–

PhD research Clinical Pharmacology and epidemiology

Ghent University Hospital

Education

2014

Clinical Pharmacologist

Dutch Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Biopharmacy · Department Clinical Pharmacology UGent/UZGent

2010

Master in pharmaceutical care

Ghent University · Faculty Pharmaceutical sciences