Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To address variability in nodal staging during curative-intent lung cancer resections, the Commission on Cancer implemented Standard 5.8 in 2021, requiring lymph nodes be sampled from ≥3 mediastinal stations and ≥1 hilar station and documented in a synoptic pathology report. We assessed compliance data from recent site reviews to evaluate the early implementation of Standard 5.8 through a federally funded collaborative. METHODS: Hospital compliance rates with Standard 5.8 were extracted from a repository of site reviewers' documentation of Commission on Cancer site visits performed during 2022 and 2023. Each review included up to 7 randomly selected pathology reports eligible for the standard. For a site to be compliant, 5 of 7 pathology reports reviewed in 2022 must have met Standard 5.8, which increased to 6 of 7 reports in 2023 and beyond. RESULTS: Overall, 652 site visits occurred in 2022 and 2023. Sites without eligible cases (n = 148 [23%]) were excluded. Among 504 eligible sites, 272 (54%) were found compliant, and 232 (46%) were found noncompliant. Of noncompliant sites, the median percentage of pathology reports meeting the standard was 29%. From 2022 to 2023, the median percentage of adherent pathology reports increased; however, overall compliance rates dipped in 2023 as the threshold needed for site compliance rose. CONCLUSIONS: With almost half of Commission on Cancer-accredited sites noncompliant, there is a real opportunity to improve the quality of surgical lymph node evaluations. This aligns with growing efforts to support hospitals and surgeons with quality improvement tools and resources for Standard 5.8.