TY - JOUR
T1 - Textbook Outcome After Oral Cancer Surgery as a Composite Measure for Survival and Quality-of-Care Evaluation
AU - van Oorschot, Hanneke Doremiek
AU - de Jel, Dominique Valerie Clarence
AU - Hardillo, Jose Angelito
AU - van Es, Robert J. J.
AU - van den Broek, Guido B.
AU - Takes, Robert Paul
AU - Halmos, Gyorgy Bela
AU - Dirven, Richard
AU - Lacko, Martin
AU - Vaassen, Lauretta Anna Alexandra
AU - Hendrickx, Jan-Jaap
AU - Oomens, Marjolijn Abigal Eva-Maria
AU - Ghaeminia, Hossein
AU - Jansen, Jeroen C.
AU - Vesseur, Annemarie
AU - Bun, Rolf
AU - Schwandt, Leonora Q.
AU - Krabbe, Christiaan A.
AU - Klein Nulent, Thomas J. W.
AU - van Bemmel, Alexander J. M.
AU - Klijn, Reinoud J.
AU - Baatenburg de Jong, Robert Jan
PY - 2025/11
Y1 - 2025/11
N2 - Objective: To enhance survival outcomes for oral cavity cancer (OCC) surgery, a composite measure has been developed: “textbook outcome” (TO). Three studies have reported on this concept in OCC, but the need for population-level results remains. This study investigates OCC surgery, focusing on survival and hospital-level results. Study Design: Cohort study. Setting: National multicenter study. Methods: All first primary OCC patients who underwent curative tumor resection between 2018 and 2021 were selected from the Dutch Head and Neck Audit database. Resections were categorized as local or extensive, the latter including neck dissection and/or free or pedicled flap reconstruction. TO was defined as the absence of 30-day mortality, hospital readmission, prolonged length-of-stay, severe complications, surgical margins <1 mm, and <18 lymph nodes per side. Adjusted hazard ratios (aHRs) were determined for 2-year overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS). Results: TO was reached in 81.1% and 46.9% after local (1039 patients) and extensive (1227 patients) resection, respectively. Reduced TO rates were observed in females, non-squamous cell carcinoma, cT3-T4, and floor of mouth compared to tongue. Obtaining TO was significantly associated with less adjuvant therapy and improved 2-year survival after local (aHR 0.55 OS P =.004, 0.70 DFS P =.085) and extensive (aHR 0.61 OS P ≤.001, 0.69 DFS P =.002) surgery. After correction for population differences, no interhospital variation in TO remained. Conclusion: Achieving TO is strongly linked to improved survival, highlighting its importance as a short-term composite quality-of-care indicator. The separate outcomes that were influential to the hospital's TO score differed between hospitals, indicating opportunities to improve outcomes.
AB - Objective: To enhance survival outcomes for oral cavity cancer (OCC) surgery, a composite measure has been developed: “textbook outcome” (TO). Three studies have reported on this concept in OCC, but the need for population-level results remains. This study investigates OCC surgery, focusing on survival and hospital-level results. Study Design: Cohort study. Setting: National multicenter study. Methods: All first primary OCC patients who underwent curative tumor resection between 2018 and 2021 were selected from the Dutch Head and Neck Audit database. Resections were categorized as local or extensive, the latter including neck dissection and/or free or pedicled flap reconstruction. TO was defined as the absence of 30-day mortality, hospital readmission, prolonged length-of-stay, severe complications, surgical margins <1 mm, and <18 lymph nodes per side. Adjusted hazard ratios (aHRs) were determined for 2-year overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS). Results: TO was reached in 81.1% and 46.9% after local (1039 patients) and extensive (1227 patients) resection, respectively. Reduced TO rates were observed in females, non-squamous cell carcinoma, cT3-T4, and floor of mouth compared to tongue. Obtaining TO was significantly associated with less adjuvant therapy and improved 2-year survival after local (aHR 0.55 OS P =.004, 0.70 DFS P =.085) and extensive (aHR 0.61 OS P ≤.001, 0.69 DFS P =.002) surgery. After correction for population differences, no interhospital variation in TO remained. Conclusion: Achieving TO is strongly linked to improved survival, highlighting its importance as a short-term composite quality-of-care indicator. The separate outcomes that were influential to the hospital's TO score differed between hospitals, indicating opportunities to improve outcomes.
KW - clinical auditing
KW - head and neck cancer
KW - oral cavity cancer
KW - quality of care evaluation
KW - survival
KW - SQUAMOUS-CELL CARCINOMA
KW - PROGNOSTIC-FACTORS
KW - HEAD
KW - COMPLICATIONS
KW - RECURRENCE
KW - RESECTION
U2 - 10.1002/ohn.1337
DO - 10.1002/ohn.1337
M3 - Article
SN - 0194-5998
VL - 173
SP - 1158
EP - 1169
JO - Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
JF - Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery
IS - 5
ER -