PURPOSE Given the perioperative morbidity and intensity of multimodality treatment, patients with resected pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) spend a substantial amount of time in clinical care. The primary aim was to determine total time spent in multimodality care for patients with locoregional PDAC. METHODS A cohort study of all patients who underwent curative-intent resection for PDAC at a single-institution, tertiary care center was performed (2015-2019). Exact times for all relevant visits were abstracted from the primary medical record, and travel time was calculated. Care time was divided into preoperative, surgical, radiation, and systemic therapy phases of care. Primary outcome measures were the percentage of total survival time (TST) and percentage of overall survival (OS) days spent in receipt of care. RESULTS One hundred seven patients were included. Patients spent a median of 5.0% (interquartile range [IQR] 2.4%-10.1%) of TST and 11.0% (IQR, 5.7%-20.4%) of OS days in receipt of clinical care. Preoperative, surgical, radiation, and systemic therapy phases of care comprised a median of 0.9% (IQR, 0.4%-2.2%), 3.0% (IQR, 1.9%-6.8%), 4.4% (IQR, 3.6%-6.3%), and 10.0% (IQR, 6.2%-14.1%) of OS days. The median per-visit travel time was 60 minutes (IQR, 32-120), and the median cumulative travel time was 22.0 hours (IQR, 12.0-51.5). 12.1% (n = 13) and 7.8% (n = 4) of patients spent > 10% of TST in receipt of surgical and systemic therapy care, respectively. CONCLUSION Patients with locoregional pancreatic cancer spend a considerable percentage of their survival time in receipt of oncologic care. Further research to determine predictors of increased time burden is warranted to better inform shared decision making.
398 Background: Treatment of early stage pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) includes surgical resection and either neoadjuvant or adjuvant chemotherapy. Due to the intensity of treatment and perioperative morbidity rates of pancreatic resection, patients may spend a significant portion of their survival time in receipt of clinical care. However, time spent in receipt of care has not been previously described in patients with early stage PDAC. The primary aim of this study was to determine the total time spent in receipt of surgical and perioperative chemotherapy in patients with resectable PDAC. Methods: A retrospective cohort study was performed of patients diagnosed with PDAC who underwent curative-intent resection at a single institution tertiary care center between January 2015 and October 2019. Patients who died within 30 days of surgery were excluded. Total care time, including all relevant clinician visits, laboratory, radiologic and procedural studies, and treatment visits, was abstracted from the primary medical record. Care time included estimated travel time based on patient address. Care time was divided into preoperative, surgical, and systemic therapy phases of care. Time spent in surgical care included the hospital length of stay, postoperative follow-up visits, and admissions for postoperative complications. Results: A total of 86 patients were identified. Median total preoperative care time was 29 hours (IQR 11-135; 0.4% of survival time, range 0% - 72.7%). Median total time spent in surgical care was 216 hours (IQR 164-371; 2% of survival time, range 0.3% - 68.4%). Among the patients who received systemic chemotherapy care within the same institutional health system (N = 41), median total time spent in receipt of systemic therapy was 447 hours (IQR 194-647; 3% of survival time, range 0.1% - 55.4%). 10.5% of patients (N = 9) spent more than 10% of total survival time in surgical care and 5.8% (N = 5) patients spent more than 10% of survival time in receipt of systemic care. Median cumulative travel time for patients was 19 hours (IQR 10.2-37.6). Conclusions: For the majority of patients undergoing resection for PDAC, time spent in receipt of surgical care does not appear to represent a substantial time burden relative to survival time. However, for a subset of patients, the time burden is considerable. Further research to determine predictors of increased time spent in receipt of multimodality cancer care is warranted to better inform patient and surgeon communication and decision-making.
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