Benchmarking cancer outcomes in Europe: a scoping review of methodologies and case-mix adjustments

Benchmarking hospital outcomes is crucial for identifying inequities and improving cancer care. Meaningful comparisons require selecting relevant outcomes and adjusting for case-mix factors such as age, comorbidity, and stage. Without case-mix adjustment, hospitals may be unfairly assessed based on...

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Published inESMO REAL WORLD DATA AND DIGITAL ONCOLOGY Vol. 9; p. 100176
Main Authors Thurell, J., Doppelbauer, L., Verheul, E.M., Petrov, I., Karsten, M.M., Koppert, L.B., Bergh, J., Fredriksson, I., Lindgren, P., Kiani, N., Hedayati, E.
Format Journal Article Publication
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.09.2025
Elsevier
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ISSN2949-8201
2949-8201
DOI10.1016/j.esmorw.2025.100176

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Summary:Benchmarking hospital outcomes is crucial for identifying inequities and improving cancer care. Meaningful comparisons require selecting relevant outcomes and adjusting for case-mix factors such as age, comorbidity, and stage. Without case-mix adjustment, hospitals may be unfairly assessed based on patient mix rather than care quality. No prior review has examined benchmarking practices in European cancer care. This scoping review addresses: (i) Which health outcomes are frequently benchmarked? (ii) What case-mix factors are commonly used for adjustment? (iii) Which statistical approaches are utilized? (iv) How are case-mix models developed and evaluated? We conducted a systematic scoping review searching OVID MEDLINE, Web of Science, and EMBASE. Eligible studies focused on benchmarking populations with a cancer diagnosis, involved European hospitals, and evaluated health outcomes like survival. Abstract screening and full-text appraisal were done independently by two authors. Data were extracted into a pre-specified matrix, and results synthesized by research question. After screening 4953 abstracts, 65 studies were included. Key gaps include a lack of validated case-mix models, under-representation of long-term outcomes, and a tendency to ‘over-adjust’ by including treatment factors in case-mix models, potentially obscuring true differences in performance. Regression modeling remains the gold standard for adjustment. A consensus is needed on reporting and evaluating case-mix models, akin to TRIPOD guidelines. A shift toward standardized, validated benchmarking practices is essential to drive health care improvements. Only through rigorous methodologies, standardized reporting, and international collaboration can hospital benchmarking become a transformative tool for improving cancer care quality and patient outcomes. •Cancer benchmarking lacks clear standards on methods for case-mix adjustment.•Benchmarking is concentrated in two countries, limiting learning across Europe.•Lack of long-term survival and patient-reported outcomes in benchmarking studies.•Case-mix models lack validation and clear reporting, undermining fair comparisons.•We propose practical guidance on case-mix modeling to support fair benchmarking.
ISSN:2949-8201
2949-8201
DOI:10.1016/j.esmorw.2025.100176