Investigator

Matthew E. Barclay

Senior Research Fellow in Statistics · University College London, Institute of Epidemiology and Health Care

MEBMatthew E. Barclay
Papers(1)
Chemotherapy use in o…
Collaborators(10)
Nathalie Saint-JacquesNicola CreightonRuth SwannShane A. JohnsonSteven HabbousTommy Hon Ting WongBjørn MøllerCheryl A. DennyDamien BennettG. Lyratzopoulos
Institutions(9)
Unknown InstitutionNunavut SivuniksavutCancer Institute Of N…NHS EnglandCancer Care OntarioCancer Council Victor…Norwegian Institute o…Queen's University Be…University College, L…

Papers

Chemotherapy use in ovarian cancer patients diagnosed 2012–2017 in Australia, Canada, Norway and the UK: An International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership (ICBP) population-based study

To describe use of chemotherapy in patients with ovarian cancer in national or sub-national populations of Australia, Canada, Norway and the UK. Linked population-based data sources were used to describe use and time to chemotherapy initiation in ovarian cancer patients diagnosed in study periods during 2012-2017. Random-effects meta-analysis characterised the size of interjurisdictional variation. Among 39,879 patients, chemotherapy use ranged from 49 % (Wales) to 75 % (Manitoba). Across jurisdictions, chemotherapy use was higher in advanced disease (79 %, 95 %CI: 74 %-83 %), and lower for stages 1-2 or localised/regional disease (54 %, 95 %CI: 48 %-60 %). Within jurisdictions, chemotherapy use was similar in patients aged 15-64 and 65-74 and then decreased sharply with increasing age. There was large interjurisdictional variation in chemotherapy use in patients aged 85-99 years with advanced disease, being, for example, 23 % (95 %CI: 20 %-25 %) in England and 61 % (95 %CI: 51 %-70 %) in Ontario. However, jurisdictions with the highest chemotherapy use in recorded advanced stage, including Ontario, tended to have higher percentage of missing stage information. Overall, time from diagnosis to chemotherapy initiation was shorter in New South Wales and Victoria and longer in Scotland and Wales. In patients with advanced disease, interjurisdictional variation in time-to-treatment was limited. Even within the same age groups and stage strata, use of chemotherapy varied substantially between jurisdictions during the mid-2010s. Future work should examine use of surgery in combination with chemotherapy. The reasons for the international variation in chemotherapy use and its contribution to international variation in survival should be established.

48Works
1Papers
10Collaborators
NeoplasmsLung NeoplasmsEarly Detection of CancerNeoplasm StagingColonic NeoplasmsChronic DiseasePulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive

Positions

2022–

Senior Research Fellow in Statistics

University College London · Institute of Epidemiology and Health Care

2021–

Research Fellow in Statistics

University College London · Institute of Epidemiology & Health Care

2015–

Statistician

University of Cambridge · Department of Public Health and Primary Care

2013–

Public Health Analyst (Cancer)

Public Health England · Knowledge & Intelligence

2012–

Cancer Intelligence Analyst

Trent Cancer Registry

Education

2021

PhD

University of Cambridge · Department of Public Health and Primary Care

2015

MSc Statistics with Medical Applications

University of Sheffield · School of Mathematics and Statistics

2011

Master of Mathematics

Durham University · Mathematics

Country

GB

Keywords
health services researchepidemiologystatisticsquality measurementcancer
Links & IDs