The challenge of rapid diagnosis in oncology: Diagnostic accuracy and cost analysis of a large-scale one-stop breast clinic

Suzette Delaloge, Julia Bonastre, Isabelle Borget, Jean Rémi Garbay, Rachel Fontenay, Diane Boinon, Mahasti Saghatchian, Marie Christine Mathieu, Chafika Mazouni, Sofia Rivera, Catherine Uzan, Fabrice André, Clarisse Dromain, Bruno Boyer, Barbara Pistilli, Sandy Azoulay, Françoise Rimareix, El Hadi Bayou, Benjamin Sarfati, Hélène CaronAmal Ghouadni, Nicolas Leymarie, Sandra Canale, Muriel Mons, Julia Arfi-Rouche, Monica Arnedos, Voichita Suciu, Philippe Vielh, Corinne Balleyguier

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

    30 Citations (Scopus)

    Résumé

    Purpose Rapid diagnosis is a key issue in modern oncology, for which one-stop breast clinics are a model. We aimed to assess the diagnosis accuracy and procedure costs of a large-scale one-stop breast clinic. Patients and methods A total of 10,602 individuals with suspect breast lesions attended the Gustave Roussy's regional one-stop breast clinic between 2004 and 2012. The multidisciplinary clinic uses multimodal imaging together with ultrasonography-guided fine needle aspiration for masses and ultrasonography-guided and stereotactic biopsies as needed. Diagnostic accuracy was assessed by comparing one-stop diagnosis to the consolidated diagnosis obtained after surgery or biopsy or long-term monitoring. The medical cost per patient of the care pathway was assessed from patient-level data collected prospectively. Results Sixty-nine percent of the patients had masses, while 31% had micro-calcifications or other non-mass lesions. In 75% of the cases (87% of masses), an exact diagnosis could be given on the same day. In the base-case analysis (i.e. considering only benign and malignant lesions at one-stop and at consolidated diagnoses), the sensitivity of the one-stop clinic was 98.4%, specificity 99.8%, positive and negative predictive values 99.7% and 99.0%. In the sensitivity analysis (reclassification of suspect, atypical and undetermined lesions), diagnostic sensitivity varied from 90.3% to 98.5% and specificity varied from 94.3% to 99.8%. The mean medical cost per patient of one-stop diagnostic procedure was €420. Conclusions One-stop breast clinic can provide timely and cost-efficient delivery of highly accurate diagnoses and serve as models of care for multiple settings, including rapid screening-linked diagnosis.

    langue originaleAnglais
    Pages (de - à)131-137
    Nombre de pages7
    journalEuropean Journal of Cancer
    Volume66
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 oct. 2016

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