Cancers (Jul 2024)

Imaging-Based Disease Assessment and Management Recommendations: Impact of Multidisciplinary Sarcoma Tumor Board

  • Maverick Jubane,
  • Andrew C. Rennick,
  • Joseph J. Villavicencio,
  • Felipe Ferreira de Souza,
  • Vanessa Peters,
  • Emily Jonczak,
  • Steven Bialick,
  • Aditi Dhir,
  • Julie Grossman,
  • Jonathan C. Trent,
  • Gina D’Amato,
  • Andrew E. Rosenberg,
  • Francis J. Hornicek,
  • Raphael L. Yechieli,
  • Ty Subhawong,
  • Francesco Alessandrino

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16152674
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 15
p. 2674

Abstract

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Multidisciplinary tumor boards (MTBs) facilitate decision-making among subspecialists in the care of oncology patients, but the mechanisms by which they enhance outcomes remain incompletely understood. Our aim was to measure the agreement between sarcoma MTBs and radiology reports’ disease assessment and management recommendations. This single-center IRB-approved retrospective study evaluated cases presented at a weekly sarcoma MTB from 1 August 2020 to 31 July 2021. Cases without clinical notes, imaging studies, or radiology reports were excluded. The data collected included the patient’s clinical status at the time of the MTB, the treatment response assessment by the MTB and radiologists (stable disease; partial response; complete response; progressive disease/recurrence), and the recommendations of the radiology reports and of the MTB. The agreement between the initial radiologist review and MTB on disease assessment and recommendations was analyzed using kappa statistics. In total, 283 cases met the inclusion criteria. Radiology reports provided recommendations in 34.3% of cases, which were adhered to by the ordering providers in 73.2% of cases. The agreement between MTBs and radiology reports was moderate in disease assessment (86.2% agreement; κ = 0.78; p p p p < 0.001). At a tertiary care center, radiologists’ isolated interpretations of imaging findings and management recommendations frequently differ from the MTB’s consensus, reflecting the value of multidisciplinary discussions incorporating the patient’s clinical status and the available treatment options into the final radiographic assessment.

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