Cancer care treatment attrition in adults: Measurement approaches and inequities in patient dropout rates - a rapid review.

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 ONCOLOGY BMC Cancer Pub Date : 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1186/s12885-024-13096-7
Jenny Shand, Elizabeth Stovold, Lucy Goulding, Kate Cheema
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Abstract

Background: Cancer treatment attrition refers to the discontinuation of prescribed cancer therapies before completion. It can significantly impact patient outcomes and cancer survival rates making it a critical concern. There is growing evidence on inequalities in cancer care, the avoidable systematic differences in the health of different groups of people. Understanding the extent of treatment attrition, why it happens, for whom, and associated inequalities may improve cancer care delivery and patient outcomes.

Methods: A rapid review was conducted to identify existing evidence on measures of cancer treatment attrition, definitions, reasons for attrition and potential inequalities. The review followed a systematic approach but with abbreviated processes to facilitate quicker evidence synthesis. Searches were restricted to MEDLINE and Embase databases from their inception dates to May 7, 2024. Additional searches were performed in PubMed, Google Scholar, and key grey literature from relevant organizations. Inclusion criteria were adults with any type of cancer undergoing treatment, with studies reporting quantitative or qualitative data on treatment attrition conducted outside of clinical trials. Exclusion criteria included studies on children or adolescents, clinical trials, non-English publications, and various non-research article types. Data extraction and quality assessment were performed using standardized tools, and studies were synthesized narratively.

Results: The search retrieved 1,353 references, with 40 studies meeting inclusion criteria. Most studies were retrospective. Studies covered various cancer types and treatments, reporting measures of attrition and reasons for treatment drop-out. Factors influencing attrition included disease progression, death, clinical deterioration, treatment toxicity, and socioeconomic factors such as lower income or socioeconomic disadvantage.

Conclusions: This review highlights significant variability in how treatment attrition is measured and defined, and suggests potential inequalities in who discontinues treatment. Standardized measures of attrition and data collection on reasons for discontinuation are essential to improve cancer care outcomes and equity. Future research should focus on developing these standardized metrics and exploring interventions targeting identified disparities to support cancer patients to complete treatment and improve outcomes.

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成人癌症护理治疗流失:测量方法和患者辍学率的不平等--快速综述。
背景:癌症治疗损耗指的是在完成治疗前中断处方癌症疗法。它会严重影响患者的治疗效果和癌症存活率,因此是一个需要重点关注的问题。越来越多的证据表明,癌症治疗中存在不平等现象,不同人群的健康状况存在本可避免的系统性差异。了解治疗损耗的程度、发生原因、治疗对象以及相关的不平等现象,可以改善癌症治疗的提供和患者的预后:我们进行了一项快速回顾,以确定有关癌症治疗流失的衡量标准、定义、流失原因和潜在不平等的现有证据。综述采用了系统性方法,但简化了流程,以便更快地进行证据综合。检索仅限于 MEDLINE 和 Embase 数据库,检索时间从开始日期至 2024 年 5 月 7 日。此外,还在 PubMed、Google Scholar 和相关机构的主要灰色文献中进行了搜索。纳入标准是正在接受治疗的任何类型癌症的成人患者,以及在临床试验之外进行的报告治疗损耗定量或定性数据的研究。排除标准包括儿童或青少年研究、临床试验、非英语出版物以及各种非研究文章类型。使用标准化工具进行数据提取和质量评估,并对研究进行叙述性综合:搜索共检索到 1,353 篇参考文献,其中 40 项研究符合纳入标准。大多数研究为回顾性研究。研究涵盖了各种癌症类型和治疗方法,报告了自然减员的衡量标准和治疗退出的原因。影响流失的因素包括疾病进展、死亡、临床恶化、治疗毒性以及社会经济因素,如收入较低或社会经济处境不利:本综述强调了在如何衡量和定义治疗损耗方面存在的巨大差异,并表明在中止治疗的人群中可能存在不平等现象。要想改善癌症治疗效果并提高公平性,就必须对自然减量进行标准化测量,并收集有关中断治疗原因的数据。未来的研究应侧重于制定这些标准化指标,并探索针对已发现差异的干预措施,以支持癌症患者完成治疗并改善疗效。
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来源期刊
BMC Cancer
BMC Cancer 医学-肿瘤学
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
2.60%
发文量
1204
审稿时长
6.8 months
期刊介绍: BMC Cancer is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of cancer research, including the pathophysiology, prevention, diagnosis and treatment of cancers. The journal welcomes submissions concerning molecular and cellular biology, genetics, epidemiology, and clinical trials.
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