| Literature DB >> 29484218 |
Kevin Selby1,2, Gillian Bartlett-Esquilant3, Jacques Cornuz1.
Abstract
With their longitudinal patient relationships, primary care physicians and their care teams are uniquely situated to promote preventive medicine, including cancer screening. A confluence of forces is driving the demand for the personalization of cancer screening recommendations. Recommendations are increasingly based on individual patient preferences, medical history, genetic and environmental risk factors, and level of interaction with the healthcare system. Current examples include choices between colonoscopy, fecal testing, and emerging tests for colorectal cancer (CRC) screening; the use of genetic information and availability of home self-testing in cervical cancer screening; the integration of multiple risk factors and patient preferences to decide the intensity and length of breast cancer screening; and the issues of smoking cessation and competing priorities when deciding whether or not to pursue lung cancer screening. These changes will inevitably increase the burden on primary care of providing high-quality cancer screening to their patients. To address, primary care physicians need access to continuously updated evidence reviews including prioritization of strongly supported recommendations, training in shared decision-making and tools for preference diagnosis, and an electronic health record (EHR) and reimbursement model that allow for population health management and team-based care. Only by reinforcing cancer screening in primary care can we ensure that personalized cancer screening is accessible and evidence-based.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer screening; Personalized medicine; Population health; Primary care
Year: 2018 PMID: 29484218 PMCID: PMC5820801 DOI: 10.1186/s40985-018-0083-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Rev ISSN: 0301-0422
Examples of increasing complexity in cancer screening recommendations and elements needed to allow for implementation of these recommendations into routine primary care
| Cancer screening | Examples of personalization | Elements needed for implementation in routine practice | Current implementation examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breast | - Integration of personal preferences into whether to initiate screening and at what age | - Patient decision aids that present risk of overdiagnosis with screening | - Australian patient decision aid shown to increase informed choices [ |
| Colorectal | - Use of tailored outreach and inreach to ensure that all patients have the best opportunity possible to complete screening | - EHR that clearly identifies patients not up to date with screening | - Kaiser Permanente screening program [ |
| Lung | - Balancing prevention messages of smoking cessation and early cancer detection | - Recommendations that prioritize tobacco cessation ahead of lung cancer screening | - EviPrev recommendations that assign priority to proven effective prevention activities [ |
| Cervical | - Individualized screening intervals based on risk human papillomavirus (HPV) status, vaccination and risk factors | - EHR with searchable vaccine history and pathology results | - Pilot studies integrating in-clinic and home HPV testing into organized screening in Italy [ |
Fig. 1Elements needed to support primary care to make personalized cancer screening possible