Quality Indicators for Screening and Surveillance of Colorectal Cancer in Adults: A Review of Performance Measures by the American College of Physicians
Cet article présente l'analyse de l'"American College of Physicians" concernant la performance de 5 indicateurs de qualité pour le dépistage et la surveillance du cancer colorectal et formule des recommandations sur les indicateurs qui pourraient être développés
Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of cancer-related deaths for both men and women. Screening for colorectal cancer is an effective strategy to reduce morbidity and mortality, but uptake remains suboptimal. Several performance measures for colorectal cancer screening and surveillance are currently used in pay-for-performance, public reporting, and/or accountability programs. The American College of Physicians (ACP) embraces performance measurement as a means to improve quality of care. The ACP believes that a performance measure must be methodologically sound and evidence-based to be considered for inclusion in payment, accountability, or reporting programs. These principles are critical given the potential effect to physician administrative work and reputation and reimbursement and to prevent unintended consequences on patient care. The ACP’s Performance Measurement Committee (PMC) reviews performance measures using a validated process to recognize high-quality performance measures, address gaps and areas for improvement in performance measures, and help reduce reporting burden. This article aims to present a review of current performance measures for colorectal cancer screening and surveillance to inform physicians, payers, and policymakers in their selection and use of performance measures and make recommendations for measures that could be developed. The PMC appreciates the importance of colorectal cancer screening in the prevention and early detection of colorectal cancer and supports performance measures based on strong recommendations. The PMC reviewed 5 performance measures for colorectal cancer screening relevant to internal medicine and supports 1 performance measure (“Facility 7-Day Risk-Standardized Hospital Visit Rate after Outpatient Colonoscopy”) for use.
Annals of Internal Medicine , article en libre accès, 2025