2013
DOI: 10.1093/annonc/mds285
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Breast cancer management and outcome according to surgeon's affiliation: a population-based comparison adjusted for patient's selection bias

Abstract: This study suggests that private BC networks could be an alternative to public BC units with both structures presenting high quality indicators of BC care and similar BC-specific mortality.

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Although there were differences in the proportion of "unknown data" for some variables, tumour characteristics did not differ significantly across the surgeon groups (table 2). In comparison with previously published data from the public sector [35] patients tended to be younger, from higher socio-economic status and more often born in Switzerland. The tumour characteristics, however, were similar (tables 1 and 2).…”
Section: Patient and Tumour Characteristicscontrasting
confidence: 71%
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“…Although there were differences in the proportion of "unknown data" for some variables, tumour characteristics did not differ significantly across the surgeon groups (table 2). In comparison with previously published data from the public sector [35] patients tended to be younger, from higher socio-economic status and more often born in Switzerland. The tumour characteristics, however, were similar (tables 1 and 2).…”
Section: Patient and Tumour Characteristicscontrasting
confidence: 71%
“…Also, this study focuses on breast cancer patients treated in the private sector; no extrapolation of our results to the public sector can be made, and we were unable to reproduce similar analyses for the public sector since the identity of the surgeons in university hospitals is unclear. However, indirect comparison with a public breast cancer unit during a similar time period showed comparable quality of care [35]. We did not control for the potential impact of "hospital volume", but we are quite confident that, since there are only three private hospitals in Geneva, which are very similar in size, in their recruitment of breast cancer patients and in the quality of care they provide, this should not influence our re- sults.…”
Section: Strengths and Limitationsmentioning
confidence: 87%
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