Frontiers in Oncology (Dec 2023)

Effect of multidisciplinary team care on patient survival in chronic hepatitis B or C hepatocellular carcinoma

  • Yu-Chen Tseng,
  • Yu-Chen Tseng,
  • Yu-Chen Tseng,
  • Yu-Chen Tseng,
  • Pei-Tseng Kung,
  • Pei-Tseng Kung,
  • Cheng-Yuan Peng,
  • Cheng-Yuan Peng,
  • Wen-Yu Chou,
  • Wen-Chen Tsai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1251571
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionMultidisciplinary team care coordinates with medical teams to improve the quality of cancer care. This study explored multidisciplinary team care in hepatitis B or hepatitis C virus-related hepatocellular carcinoma patients from the time of diagnosis to the first-time treatment interval and investigated treatment outcomes and prognosis.MethodsThis retrospective cohort study included data from a nationwide population from 2007 to 2016. Data were collected from the Taiwan Cancer Registry Database, linked to the Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database. Propensity score matching was applied at a ratio of 1:2 to reduce the selection bias. A multiple regression model with generalized estimating equations was used to analyze whether multidisciplinary team care affected the diagnosis-to-treatment interval. The stratified Cox proportional hazards model examined whether involvement in multidisciplinary team care influenced survival status.ResultsA total of 10,928 and 21,856 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma received multidisciplinary and non-multidisciplinary care, respectively. Participants with multidisciplinary care had a longer diagnosis-to-treatment interval but a lower risk of cumulative cancer death (HR=0.88, 95% CI:0.84-0.92). In patients with intermediate- to advanced-stage hepatocellular carcinoma, multidisciplinary team care has obvious benefits for improving survival.ConclusionPatients with hepatocellular carcinoma who participated in multidisciplinary team care had a longer diagnosis-to-treatment interval but a lower risk of cancer death. Patients with intermediate- to advanced-stage hepatocellular carcinoma who received multidisciplinary team care significantly benefited from this outcome. Hospitals should provide HCC patients with multidisciplinary team care to improve cancer care.

Keywords