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Published in: Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 12/2017

01-12-2017 | Original Article

The Effects of Travel Burden on Outcomes After Resection of Extrahepatic Biliary Malignancies: Results from the US Extrahepatic Biliary Consortium

Authors: Sean C. O’Connor, Harveshp Mogal, Gregory Russell, Cecilia Ethun, Ryan C. Fields, Linda Jin, Ioannis Hatzaras, Gerardo Vitiello, Kamran Idrees, Chelsea A. Isom, Robert Martin, Charles Scoggins, Timothy M. Pawlik, Carl Schmidt, George Poultsides, Thuy B. Tran, Sharon Weber, Ahmed Salem, Shishir Maithel, Perry Shen

Published in: Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | Issue 12/2017

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Abstract

Background

Surgical resection of extrahepatic biliary malignancies has been increasingly centralized at high-volume tertiary care centers. While this has improved outcomes overall, increased travel burden has been associated with worse survival for many other malignancies. We hypothesized that longer travel distances are associated with worse outcomes for these patients as well.

Study Design

Data was analyzed from the US Extrahepatic Biliary Consortium database, which retrospectively reviewed patients who received resection of extrahepatic biliary malignancies at 10 high-volume centers. Driving distance to the patient’s treatment center was measured for 1025 patients. These were divided into four quartiles for analysis: < 24.5, 24.5–57.2, 57.2–117, and < 117 mi. Cox proportional hazard models were then used to measure differences in overall survival.

Results

No difference was found between the groups in severity of disease or post-operative complications. The median overall survival in each quartile was as follows: 1st = 1.91, 2nd = 1.60, 3rd = 1.30, and 4th = 1.39 years. Patients in the 3rd and 4th quartile had a significantly lower median household income (p = 0.0001) and a greater proportion Caucasian race (p = 0.0001). However, neither of these was independently associated with overall survival. The two furthest quartiles were found to have decreased overall survival (HR = 1.39, CI = 1.12–1.73 and HR = 1.3, CI = 1.04–1.62), with quartile 3 remaining significant after multivariate analysis (HR = 1.45, CI = 1.04–2.0, p = 0.028).

Conclusions

Longer travel distances were associated with decreased overall survival, especially in the 3rd quartile of our study. Patients traveling longer distances also had a lower household income, suggesting that these patients have significant barriers to care.
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Metadata
Title
The Effects of Travel Burden on Outcomes After Resection of Extrahepatic Biliary Malignancies: Results from the US Extrahepatic Biliary Consortium
Authors
Sean C. O’Connor
Harveshp Mogal
Gregory Russell
Cecilia Ethun
Ryan C. Fields
Linda Jin
Ioannis Hatzaras
Gerardo Vitiello
Kamran Idrees
Chelsea A. Isom
Robert Martin
Charles Scoggins
Timothy M. Pawlik
Carl Schmidt
George Poultsides
Thuy B. Tran
Sharon Weber
Ahmed Salem
Shishir Maithel
Perry Shen
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery / Issue 12/2017
Print ISSN: 1091-255X
Electronic ISSN: 1873-4626
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-017-3537-4

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