| Literature DB >> 29512428 |
Lingli Fan1, Jie Li1, Miao Xiang1, Li Yuan1, Yu Zhang1, Gang Feng1, Xiaobo Du1.
Abstract
Objective To investigate the attitudes of radiation oncologists towards using percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) to solve nutritional problems in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC) undergoing radiotherapy. Methods A self-reported questionnaire was developed and used to assess the willingness of radiation oncologists from 26 hospitals throughout several provinces in China to use the nutritional method. Results Of the 433 radiation oncologists who were contacted and returned questionnaires, 361 were completed correctly and used in the study (83.4% completion rate). Years of working and degree of understanding PEG were significantly related to the willingness of oncologists to use PEG in patients with HNC. Radiation oncologists who were willing to accept PEG training were more willing to use PEG. Main reasons for unwillingness to use PEG were poor understanding of the operation or cost and fear of side effects causing medical disputes. Conclusions The findings of the survey suggest that attitudes of radiation oncologists in China towards using PEG in patients with HNC requiring nutritional support may be improved by providing accessible training in the technique.Entities:
Keywords: Radiation oncologist; head and neck cancer; percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy; radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29512428 PMCID: PMC5991233 DOI: 10.1177/0300060518756244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Med Res ISSN: 0300-0605 Impact factor: 1.671
Demographic characteristics of the participants.
| Characteristic | Radiation |
|---|---|
| Participants, | 361 |
| Age, years, | |
| mean ± SD | 36.8 ±7.8 |
| median(range) | 35 (20–62) |
| Sex, | |
| male | 178 (49.3) |
| female | 183 (50.7) |
| Professional level, | |
| primary | 110 (30.4) |
| middle | 142 (39.3) |
| advanced | 109 (30.3) |
| Times in qualification, years, | |
| mean ± SD | 9.7±7.4 |
| median(range) | 8 (0.5–40) |
| Work environment, | |
| General hospital | 277 (76.7) |
| Specialist hospital | 84 (23.3) |
| Degree of understanding of PEG, | |
| high | 28 (7.7) |
| partial | 250 (69.3) |
| none | 83 (23.0) |
SD, standard deviation
Demographic characteristics and oncologists’ willingness to use percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (N=361).
| Characteristic | Willing to use PEG | Not willing to use PEG | Statistical significance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||
| male | 121 (67.4) | 57 (32.6) |
|
| female | 139 (76.0) | 44 (24.0) | |
| Age | |||
| <40 years old | 161 (69.4) | 71 (30.6) |
|
| ≥40 years old | 99 (76.7) | 30 (23.3) | |
| Years of working | |||
| <5 years | 75 (67.6) | 36 (32.4) | 0.044 |
| ≥5 years | 188 (75.2) | 62 (24.8) | |
| Work environment | |||
| General hospital | 206 (74.4) | 71 (25.6) |
|
| Specialist hospital | 54 (64.3) | 30 (35.7) | |
| Number of beds | |||
| <1000 beds | 61 (66.3) | 31 (33.7) |
|
| ≥1000 beds | 199 (74.0) | 70 (26.0) | |
| Number of years treating patients with HNC* | |||
| <50 | 115 (70.6) | 48 (29.4) |
|
| ≥50 | 144 (73.1) | 53 (26.9) | |
| Incidence of difficulty in feeding | |||
| <50% | 161 (73.9) | 57 (26.1) |
|
| ≥50% | 99 (69.2) | 44 (30.8) | |
| Degree of understanding of PEG | |||
| high | 25 (89.3) | 3 (10.7) | 0.031 |
| partial | 182 (70.8) | 68 (27.2) | |
| none | 53 (63.9) | 30 (36.1) | |
| Hospitals carrying out PEG technology | |||
| yes | 127 (75.1) | 42 (24.9) |
|
| no | 96 (71.6) | 38 (28.4) | |
| don't know | 37 (63.8) | 21 (36.2) | |
| Confident user of PEG | |||
| yes | 15 (88.2) | 2 (11.8) |
|
| no | 245 (71.2) | 99 (28.8) | |
| Willing to accept PEG training | |||
| yes | 230 (88.5) | 30 (11.5) | 0.001 |
| no | 62 (61.4) | 39 (38.6) | |
| Who will operate PEG? | |||
| competent doctor | 27 (73.0 | 10 (27.0) |
|
| trained professionals | 149 (72.3) | 57 (27.7) | |
| gastroscope room/ radiology department | 80 (70.8) | 33 (29.2) | |
| surgeon | 4 (80.0) | 1 (20.0) |
Data presented as n (%)
*n=360
#some oncologists added their own text
PEG, percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy
Reasons for not choosing percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy.
| Reasons | Radiation Oncologists |
|---|---|
| Limited understanding about the operation or cost | 56 (37.1) |
| Fear of side effects causing medical disputes | 50 (33.1) |
| Clinical work too busy, do not want to increase the workload | 21 (13.9) |
| The high cost of operation | 16 (10.6) |
| Other* | 8 (5.2) |
*some oncologists provided their own text