| Literature DB >> 32712771 |
Elise Deluche1, Tiffany Darbas2, Kevin Bourcier2, Loic Montangon3, Geraldine Bayard2, Evelyne Caille2, Julie Querrioux2, Chantal Suchaud2, Sonia Zabaleta2, Sabine Chaput2, Valerie Le Brun-Ly2, Julia Pestre2, Laurence Venat2, Frédéric Thuillier2, Elodie Nevado4, Gaelle Maillan4, Jeremy Jost4, Sophie Leobon2, Nicole Tubiana-Mathieu2, Sandrine Lavau-Denes2.
Abstract
Oral therapies have highly modified cancer patient management and changed hospital practises. We introduce a specific Oral Therapy Centre and retrospectively review information prospectively recorded by co-ordination nurses (CNs) (the DICTO programme). We describe the roles played by CNs in the management of oral cancer therapies at Limoges Dupuytren Hospital between May 2015 and June 2018. All cancers, irrespective of stage or whether oral general chemotherapy or targeted therapy was prescribed, are included. We followed up 287 patients of median age 67 years (range 26-89 years). Of these, 76% had metastases and 44% were on first-line therapy. The vast majority (88%) of their first CN contacts occurred just after physician consultation and lasted an average of 60 min. As part of follow-up, the CNs made 2719 calls (average 10 min) to patients to educate them and to verify compliance and drug tolerance. They also received 833 calls from patients (70%) or their relatives or health professionals (30%) seeking advice on management of side effects. In addition to the initial appointments, 1069 non-scheduled follow-up visits were made to assess side effects (49.2%). The CNs devoted 5 h to each patient over 3 months of treatment (i.e. 25 min/day) and, also organised scheduled hospitalisations in the department of oncology for 51% of patients. We show the interest and real-life work in a specific oral therapy centre within oncology department with the role of CNs to facilitate the global health care of the patients.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Co-ordination; Multidisciplinary management; Oral therapies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32712771 PMCID: PMC7382654 DOI: 10.1007/s12032-020-01393-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Oncol ISSN: 1357-0560 Impact factor: 3.064
Fig. 1Flow chart of the DICTO programme
Tumour and patient characteristics
| Number of patients | 287 |
| Sex | |
| Male | 132 (46) |
| Female | 155 (54) |
| Median age (minimum to maximum) (years) | 67 (26–89) |
| Patients aged > 75 years | 63 (22) |
| Median G8 score (29 cases) (minimum to maximum) | 12 (6–16) |
| High-risk patients as revealed by INCA | 131 (45.6) |
| Primary tumours | |
| Breast cancer | 88 (30) |
| Renal cancer | 54 (19) |
| Colorectal cancer | 34 (12) |
| Brain tumour | 30 (10) |
| Prostate cancer | 19 (7) |
| Sarcoma | 13 (4.5) |
| Lung cancer | 11 (4) |
| Neuro-endocrine pancreatic cancer | 11 (4) |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | 8 (3) |
| Ovarian cancer | 7 (2.5) |
| GIST | 4 (1.4) |
| ACUP | 3 (1) |
| Thyroid cancer | 3 (1) |
| Cholangiocarcinoma | 2 (0.6) |
| Time between initial diagnosis and study inclusion (months); median (minimum to maximum) | 23 (1–286) |
| Treatment characteristics | |
| Neoadjuvant or adjuvant setting | 67 (24) |
| Metastatic setting | 220 (76) |
| Therapy line in metastatic setting (median, minimum to maximum) | 2 (1–9) |
Data are n (%) unless indicated otherwise
High risks included brain and pancreatic cancers, metastatic cancer, inoperable local recurrence, social fragility as revealed by INCA, and age over 75 years
Actions taken during initial appointments
| Total | 287 |
| Contact with general practitioners: | |
| Contact made by telephone: yes/no | 254 (88)/32 (11) |
| Absence of contact with a general practitioner because … | |
| General practitioner not available (answering machine or secretary) | 13 (40) |
| Other reasons (unknown phone number, lack of time) | 13 (40) |
| Absence of a patient-designated doctor | 6 (18) |
| Duration of calls to the general practitioner (min) | 10 (3–43) |
| Letters sent to general practitioners: yes/no | 234 (81)/47 (16) |
| Information sent to general practitioners: yes/no | 225 (78)/52 (18) |
| Contact with town nurses: | |
| Contact by telephone: yes/no | 188 (65)/98 (34) |
| Absence of contact with town nurses because… | |
| Absence of patient-designated nurse | 70 (72) |
| Other reasons (unknown phone number, lack of time) | 25 (25) |
| Nurse not available | 3 (3) |
| Duration of calls to town nurse (min) | 6 (2–30) |
| Contact with town pharmacists | |
| Contact by telephone: yes/no | 242 (84)/44 (15) |
| Absence of contact with town pharmacists because… | |
| Medication given by hospital | 26 (60) |
| Other reasons (unknown phone number, lack of time) | 8 (18) |
| Absence of a patient-designated pharmacist | 7 (16) |
| Pharmacist not available | 3 (6) |
| Duration of call to pharmacist (min) | 10 (2–40) |
| Total length of CN calls (pharmacist + general practitioner + town nurse) | 20 (2–65) |
| Contact with social services | 46 |
| Duration of call to social services (min) | 30 (5–185) |
| Other calls | 72 |
| Requests for additional examinations | 51 (71) |
| Other | 9 (12.5) |
| Hospital nurses | 5 (7) |
| Hospital doctors | 4 (5.5) |
| Town laboratory | 2 (3) |
| Dieticians | 1 (1) |
| Duration of calls (min) | 10 (5–20) |
Planned and unplanned calls made by oral therapy centre nurses during follow-up
| Total | |
|---|---|
| Number of planned callsa | 2719 |
| Number of calls per patient made during follow-up; median (minimum to maximum) | 15 (1–58) |
| Duration of calls (min); median (minimum to maximum) | 10 (2–130) |
| Persons called, | 2821 |
| Patients | 1869 (66.3) |
| Town laboratory | 469 (16.6) |
| Patient helpers and families | 226 (8.0) |
| Hospital services | 60 (2.5) |
| Pharmacists | 52 (1.8) |
| Persons responsible for additional examinations | 39 (1.3) |
| General practitioners | 27 (1.0) |
| Town nurses | 34 (1.2) |
| Nurses in the medical oncology department | 20 (0.7) |
| Others | 14 (0.5) |
| Social services | 7 (0.2) |
| Psychologists | 4 (0.1) |
| Causes of calls, | 2719 |
| Test results | 1345 (49.4) |
| Systematic follow-up | 658 (24.2) |
| Treatment validations | 434 (16.0) |
| Administrative information | 168 (6.2) |
| Medical information | 74 (2.7) |
| Concomitant treatments | 25 (1.0) |
| Education | 15 (0.5) |
| Actions taken after phone calls, | 507 |
| Contact hospital doctors | 308 (60.7) |
| Request prescriptions | 81 (16) |
| Contact general practitioners | 27 (5.3) |
| Requests for home test check-ups | 25 (4.9) |
| Emergency hospitalisation | 17 (3.3) |
| Contact town nurses | 11 (2.2) |
| Reformulated hygiene/dietary advice | 11 (2.2) |
| Contact psychologists | 9 (1.8) |
| Contact patients | 8 (1.6) |
| Direct hospitalisation in a ward | 6 (1.2) |
| Contact nurse co-ordinators | 2 (0.4) |
| Contact family/caregiver | 1 (0.2) |
| Contact social services | 1 (0.2) |
aPlanned calls were made on days 8–10 for high-risk patients, then on days 15 and 30 and every 3 months thereafter
Unplanned calls received and made by oral therapy centre nurses during follow-up
| Total | |
|---|---|
| Number of calls received | 833 |
| Number of calls per patient during follow-up; median (minimum to maximum) | 6 (1–25) |
| Duration of calls received (min); median (minimum to maximum) | 10 (2–135) |
| Persons initiating calls, | 833 |
| Patients | 586 (70) |
| Patient helpers | 93 (12) |
| Family members | 58 (7) |
| Hospital services (other) | 24 (3) |
| Town nurses | 26 (3) |
| General practitioners | 19 (2) |
| Pharmacists | 12 (1.3) |
| Nurses in the medical oncology department | 8 (0.9) |
| Town laboratory | 6 (0.7) |
| Hospital service (additional examinations) | 1 (0.1) |
| Causes of calls, | 884 |
| Side effects | 334 (37.8) |
| Test results received | 84 (9.5) |
| Misunderstanding/reformulation | 79 (9.0) |
| Request for prescription | 74 (8.4) |
| Anxiety/moral support | 71 (8.0) |
| Administrative information | 59 (6.7) |
| Appointment confirmation | 47 (5.3) |
| Other | 46 (5.2) |
| Changing an appointment | 37 (4.1) |
| Concomitant treatments | 32 (3.6) |
| Request hospitalisation (emergencies) | 10 (1.1) |
| Request new appointments | 6 (0.7) |
| Hygiene/dietary advice | 5 (0.6) |
| Actions taken after calls, | 507 |
| Contact hospital doctors | 308 (60.7) |
| Requests for prescriptions | 81 (16) |
| Contact general practitioners | 27 (5.3) |
| Requests for home test check-up | 25 (4.9) |
| Emergency hospitalisation | 17 (3.3) |
| Contact town nurses | 11 (2.2) |
| Reformulated hygiene-dietary advice | 11 (2.2) |
| Contact psychologists | 9 (1.8) |
| Patient contact | 8 (1.6) |
| Direct hospitalisation in a ward | 6 (1.2) |
| Contact nurse co-ordinators | 2 (0.4) |
| Contact family/caregiver | 1 (0.2) |
| Contact social services | 1 (0.2) |
Appointments in the oral therapy centre
| Total | |
|---|---|
| Number of appointments | 1069 |
| Number of appointments per patient; median (minimum to maximum) | 6 (1–18) |
| Duration of appointment (min);median (minimum to maximum) | 30 (10–410) |
| Reasons, | |
| Side effects | 526 (49.2) |
| Scheduled appointments | 543 (50.8) |
| After-appointment contacts, | 78 |
| Hospital doctors | 55 (70.5) |
| Town nurses | 9 (11.5) |
| General practitioners | 5 (6.5) |
| Psychologists | 5 (6.5) |
| Social services | 2 (2.6) |
| Family/caregivers | 1 (1.2) |
| Co-ordinating nurse | 1 (1.2) |
| Actions taken after appointments, | 103 |
| Requests for home test check-ups | 50 (48.6) |
| Direct hospitalisation in a ward | 19 (18.4) |
| Requests for prescriptions | 18 (17.4) |
| Reformulated hygiene/dietary advice | 16 (15.6) |