| Literature DB >> 29170285 |
Hannah McConnell1, Rachel White1, Jane Maher1,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study is to categorise cancers into broad groups based on clusters of common treatment aims, experiences and outcomes to provide a numerical framework for understanding the services required to meet the needs of people with different cancers. This framework will enable a high-level overview of care and support requirements for the whole cancer population. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: People in the UK with 1 of 20 common cancers; an estimated 309 000 diagnoses in 2014, 1 679 000 people diagnosed in a 20-year period and still living in 2010 and 135 000 cancer deaths in 2014. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Survival and stage at diagnosis data were reviewed alongside clinically led assumptions to identify commonalities and cluster cancer types into three groups. The three cancer groups were then described using incidence, prevalence and mortality data collected and reported by UK cancer registries. This was then reviewed, validated and refined following consultation.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cancer services; personalised-care; quality Of life; survival; survivorship
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29170285 PMCID: PMC5719281 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-016797
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Key data sources by measure, year and coverage
| Measure | Time period | Year | Coverage | References |
| Prevalence | 20-year prevalence | Up to the end of 2010 | UK |
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| Incidence | Annual | 2014 | UK |
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| Incidence by stage at diagnosis | Annual | 2014 | England and Northern Ireland (cervix) |
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| Mortality | Annual | 2014 (Northern Ireland 2013) | UK |
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| Survival all stages combined | 1 and 5 years | Predicted for adults diagnosed in 2015 | England |
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| Survival by stage | 1 year | Diagnosed 2014 followed up to 2015 | England |
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| Diagnosed 2002–2009 (cervix) | Northern Ireland |
| ||
| Survival by stage | 5 years | Diagnosed 2006–2010 (renal cell kidney cancer) | England |
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| Diagnosed 2002–2006 (prostate, breast and uterus) | Former Anglia Cancer Network |
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| Diagnosed 2002–2009 (cervix) and 2005–2009 (colorectal) | Northern Ireland |
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CRUK, Cancer Reseach UK; ISD, Information Services Divisionsion Scotland; NCIN, National Cancer Intelligence Network; NCRAS, National Cancer Registration and Analysis Service; NICR, Northern Ireland Cancer Registry; ONS, Office for National Statistics; WCISU, Welsh Cancer Intelligence & Surveillance Unit.
Figure 11-year and 5-year survival rates by cancer type, stage and group, England, up to 2011–2015. Data are for England except cervix cancer by stage which is Northern Ireland data and 5 year survival by stage which is regional data from the former Anglia Cancer Network or Northern Ireland data. The year of data varies with the earliest time period people were diagnosed as 2002–2006 followed up to 2011 for the 5 year survival by stage data and the latest as predicted survival for people diagnosed in 2015 for cancers with no stage split. See sources in table 1 for more details.
Figure 2Proportion of people in each of the three cancer groups, estimates for the UK.
Summarising the features, needs and care requirements of the three cancer groups
| Group 1: longer term survival | Group 2: intermediate survival | Group 3: shorter term survival |
| People with a group 1 cancer typically have an early stage, potentially curable cancer and a prognosis of a decade or more. Most people survive in the long term, often in relatively good health (and many live for more than a decade) | People with a group 2 cancer often have treatable but not curable disease, typically having multiple lines of treatment. Most people experience cancer as a complex ongoing disease similar to a long-term condition | People with a group 3 cancer typically develop advanced disease and often have <12 months prognosis. Most people have relatively poor health |
| Often face long-term consequences of their cancer and its treatment. May face recurrence even years after primary treatment | Often have a complex pathway, with multiple decision points, commonly experience relapse or recurrence | Often face short survival times, mostly incurable disease and complex, time-sensitive decisions needed |
| Focus on recovery and long-term quality of life: Reduce unnecessary overtreatment, focus on its impact on recovery and late effects Management of co-morbidities Recovery package, including stratified pathways and self-care with support and open access Periodic monitoring of heath, eg, for cardio function and fatigue | Care must preserve quality of life through balance of: Acute intervention Chronic illness management Palliative care principals Shared care between patient and clinician Acknowledgement that cancer is likely to be life-limiting Recognition when move to dying phase | Balance of anticancer treatment and palliative care to maintain quality of life. Focus care on: Complex case management Good treatment and supportive specialist palliative care Early access to palliative care Early diagnosis |