2022 年及 2050 年全球放射治疗需求及相应的放射治疗专业人员需求预测:一项基于人口的研究。

IF 19.9 1区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Lancet Global Health Pub Date : 2024-10-11 DOI:10.1016/s2214-109x(24)00355-3
Hongcheng Zhu,Melvin Lee Kiang Chua,Imjai Chitapanarux,Orit Kaidar-Person,Catherine Mwaba,Majed Alghamdi,Andrés Rodríguez Mignola,Natalia Amrogowicz,Gozde Yazici,Zouhour Bourhaleb,Humera Mahmood,Golam Mohiuddin Faruque,Muthukkumaran Thiagarajan,Abdelkader Acharki,Mingwei Ma,Martin Harutyunyan,Hutcha Sriplung,Yuntao Chen,Rolando Camacho,Zhen Zhang,May Abdel-Wahab
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We obtained incidence figures for 29 types of cancer across 183 countries and derived the cancer-specific radiotherapy use rate using the 2013 Collaboration for Cancer Outcomes Research and Evaluation model. We delineated the proportion of people with cancer who require radiotherapy and can be accommodated within the existing installed capacity, assuming an optimal use rate of 50% or 64%, in both 2022 and 2050. A use rate of 50% corresponds to the global average and a use rate of 64% considers potential re-treatment scenarios, as indicated by the 2013 Collaboration for Cancer Outcomes Research and Evaluation (CCORE) radiotherapy use rate model. We established specified requirements for teletherapy units at a ratio of 1:450 patients, for radiation oncologists at a ratio of 1:250 patients, for medical physicists at a ratio of 1:450 patients, and for radiation therapists at a ratio of 1:150 patients in all countries and consistently using these ratios. 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Asia was estimated to have the highest radiotherapy demand in 2050 (11 119 478 [52·6%] of 21 161 603 people with cancer), followed by Europe (3 564 316 [16·8%]), North America (2 546 826 [12·0%]), Latin America and the Caribbean (1 837 608 [8·7%]), Africa (1 799 348 [8·5%]), and Oceania (294 026 [1·4%]). We estimated that the global radiotherapy workforce in 2022 needed 51 111 radiation oncologists, 28 395 medical physicists, and 85 184 radiation therapists and 84 646 radiation oncologists, 47 026 medical physicists, and 141 077 radiation therapists in 2050. We estimated that the largest proportion of the radiotherapy workforce in 2050 would be in upper-middle-income countries (101 912 [38·8%] of 262 624 global radiotherapy professionals).\r\n\r\nINTERPRETATION\r\nUrgent strategies are required to empower the global health-care workforce and facilitate the fundamental human right of access to suitable health care. A collective effort with innovative and cost-contained health-care strategies from all stakeholders is warranted to enhance global accessibility to radiotherapy and address challenges in cancer care.\r\n\r\nFUNDING\r\nChina Medical Board Global Health Leadership Development Program, Shanghai Science and Technology Committee Fund, China Ministry of Science and Technology Department of International Cooperation High Level Cooperation and Exchange Projects, and Fudan University Office of Global Partnerships Key Projects Development Fund.\r\n\r\nTRANSLATIONS\r\nFor the Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish translations of the summary see Supplementary Materials section.","PeriodicalId":48783,"journal":{"name":"Lancet Global Health","volume":"17 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":19.9000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Global radiotherapy demands and corresponding radiotherapy-professional workforce requirements in 2022 and predicted to 2050: a population-based study.\",\"authors\":\"Hongcheng Zhu,Melvin Lee Kiang Chua,Imjai Chitapanarux,Orit Kaidar-Person,Catherine Mwaba,Majed Alghamdi,Andrés Rodríguez Mignola,Natalia Amrogowicz,Gozde Yazici,Zouhour Bourhaleb,Humera Mahmood,Golam Mohiuddin Faruque,Muthukkumaran Thiagarajan,Abdelkader Acharki,Mingwei Ma,Martin Harutyunyan,Hutcha Sriplung,Yuntao Chen,Rolando Camacho,Zhen Zhang,May Abdel-Wahab\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/s2214-109x(24)00355-3\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"BACKGROUND\\r\\nAddressing the challenge of cancer control requires a comprehensive, integrated, and global health-system response. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景应对癌症控制的挑战需要一个全面、综合和全球性的医疗系统。我们利用全球癌症观察站(GLOBOCAN)2022 年的数据开展了一项基于人口的研究,并预测了 2050 年全球放疗需求和劳动力需求。我们获得了 183 个国家 29 种癌症的发病率数据,并利用 2013 年癌症结果研究与评估合作组织的模型得出了癌症放疗使用率。假定 2022 年和 2050 年的最佳使用率分别为 50%或 64%,我们划定了需要接受放射治疗的癌症患者在现有装机容量内可容纳的比例。50% 的使用率符合全球平均水平,而 64% 的使用率则考虑了潜在的再治疗情况,如 2013 年癌症结果研究与评估合作组织 (CCORE) 的放射治疗使用率模型所示。我们规定,所有国家的远程治疗单位与患者的比例为 1:450,放射肿瘤学家与患者的比例为 1:250,医学物理学家与患者的比例为 1:450,放射治疗师与患者的比例为 1:150,并始终采用这些比例。我们从 32 个国家的国家健康报告、肿瘤协会或其他权威机构收集了当前国家层面的放射治疗专业人员数据。结果 2022 年,估计有 2,000 万新确诊癌症患者,其中约 1,000 万新患者需要放射治疗,估计使用率为 50%,1,200 万至 800 万患者需要放射治疗,估计使用率为 64%。GLOBOCAN 2022 年的数据显示,2050 年新增癌症诊断病例 3300 万例,其中需要接受放射治疗的新增患者 16500 万例,估计使用率为 50%,2100 万例,估计使用率为 64%。这些结果表明,按64%的估计使用率计算,从2022年到2050年,需要接受放射治疗的绝对人数将增加84万;按50%的估计使用率计算,绝对人数将增加65万。据估计,2050 年亚洲的放射治疗需求量最大(21 161 603 名癌症患者中有 11 119 478 人[52-6%]),其次是欧洲(3 564 316 人[16-8%])、北美洲(2 546 826 人[12-0%])、拉丁美洲和加勒比海地区(1 837 608 人[8-7%])、非洲(1 799 348 人[8-5%])和大洋洲(294 026 人[1-4%])。我们估计,2022 年全球放射治疗人员需要 51 111 名放射肿瘤学家、28 395 名医学物理学家和 85 184 名放射治疗学家,2050 年需要 84 646 名放射肿瘤学家、47 026 名医学物理学家和 141 077 名放射治疗学家。我们估计,到 2050 年,中上收入国家的放射治疗人员将占最大比例(全球 262 624 名放射治疗专业人员中的 101 912 人[38-8%])。为提高全球放射治疗的可及性并应对癌症治疗方面的挑战,所有利益相关方应共同努力,制定创新且成本可控的医疗保健战略。基金资助中国医学会全球卫生领导力发展项目、上海市科委基金、中国科技部国际合作司高层合作与交流项目、复旦大学全球伙伴关系办公室重点项目发展基金。
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Global radiotherapy demands and corresponding radiotherapy-professional workforce requirements in 2022 and predicted to 2050: a population-based study.
BACKGROUND Addressing the challenge of cancer control requires a comprehensive, integrated, and global health-system response. We aimed to estimate global radiotherapy demands and requirements for radiotherapy professionals from 2022 to 2050. METHODS We conducted a population-based study using data from the Global Cancer Observatory (GLOBOCAN) 2022 and predicted global radiotherapy demands and workforce requirements in 2050. We obtained incidence figures for 29 types of cancer across 183 countries and derived the cancer-specific radiotherapy use rate using the 2013 Collaboration for Cancer Outcomes Research and Evaluation model. We delineated the proportion of people with cancer who require radiotherapy and can be accommodated within the existing installed capacity, assuming an optimal use rate of 50% or 64%, in both 2022 and 2050. A use rate of 50% corresponds to the global average and a use rate of 64% considers potential re-treatment scenarios, as indicated by the 2013 Collaboration for Cancer Outcomes Research and Evaluation (CCORE) radiotherapy use rate model. We established specified requirements for teletherapy units at a ratio of 1:450 patients, for radiation oncologists at a ratio of 1:250 patients, for medical physicists at a ratio of 1:450 patients, and for radiation therapists at a ratio of 1:150 patients in all countries and consistently using these ratios. We collected current country-level data on the radiotherapy-professional workforce from national health reports, oncology societies, or other authorities from 32 countries. FINDINGS In 2022, there were an estimated 20·0 million new cancer diagnoses, with approximately 10·0 million new patients needing radiotherapy at an estimated use rate of 50% and 12·8 million at an estimated use rate of 64%. In 2050, GLOBOCAN 2022 data indicated 33·1 million new cancer diagnoses, with 16·5 million new patients needing radiotherapy at an estimated use rate of 50% and 21·2 million at an estimated use rate of 64%. These findings indicate an absolute increase of 8·4 million individuals requiring radiotherapy from 2022 to 2050 at an estimated use rate of 64%; at an estimated use rate of 50%, the absolute increase would be 6·5 million individuals. Asia was estimated to have the highest radiotherapy demand in 2050 (11 119 478 [52·6%] of 21 161 603 people with cancer), followed by Europe (3 564 316 [16·8%]), North America (2 546 826 [12·0%]), Latin America and the Caribbean (1 837 608 [8·7%]), Africa (1 799 348 [8·5%]), and Oceania (294 026 [1·4%]). We estimated that the global radiotherapy workforce in 2022 needed 51 111 radiation oncologists, 28 395 medical physicists, and 85 184 radiation therapists and 84 646 radiation oncologists, 47 026 medical physicists, and 141 077 radiation therapists in 2050. We estimated that the largest proportion of the radiotherapy workforce in 2050 would be in upper-middle-income countries (101 912 [38·8%] of 262 624 global radiotherapy professionals). INTERPRETATION Urgent strategies are required to empower the global health-care workforce and facilitate the fundamental human right of access to suitable health care. A collective effort with innovative and cost-contained health-care strategies from all stakeholders is warranted to enhance global accessibility to radiotherapy and address challenges in cancer care. FUNDING China Medical Board Global Health Leadership Development Program, Shanghai Science and Technology Committee Fund, China Ministry of Science and Technology Department of International Cooperation High Level Cooperation and Exchange Projects, and Fudan University Office of Global Partnerships Key Projects Development Fund. TRANSLATIONS For the Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish translations of the summary see Supplementary Materials section.
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来源期刊
Lancet Global Health
Lancet Global Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
44.10
自引率
1.20%
发文量
763
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The Lancet Global Health is an online publication that releases monthly open access (subscription-free) issues.Each issue includes original research, commentary, and correspondence.In addition to this, the publication also provides regular blog posts. The main focus of The Lancet Global Health is on disadvantaged populations, which can include both entire economic regions and marginalized groups within prosperous nations.The publication prefers to cover topics related to reproductive, maternal, neonatal, child, and adolescent health; infectious diseases (including neglected tropical diseases); non-communicable diseases; mental health; the global health workforce; health systems; surgery; and health policy.
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