| Literature DB >> 34716541 |
M Provencio1, N Romero2, J Tabernero3, R Vera4, D V Baz5, A Arraiza6, C Camps7, E Felip8, P Garrido9, B Gaspar10, M Llombart11, A López12, I Magallón13, V M Ibáñez14, J M Olmos15, C Mur16, A Navarro-Ruiz17, A Pastor18, M Peiró19, J Polo20, Á Rodríguez-Lescure21.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The increase in the prevalence "long-term cancer survivor" (LCS) patients is expected to increase the cost of LCS care. The aim of this study was to obtain information that would allow to optimise the current model of health management in Spain to adapt it to one of efficient LCS patient care.Entities:
Keywords: LCS patient care; Long cancer survivor; Multidisciplinary cancer care
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34716541 PMCID: PMC8555713 DOI: 10.1007/s12094-021-02696-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Oncol ISSN: 1699-048X Impact factor: 3.405
Fig. 1Level of agreement reached for each section in the Delphi study
Percentage of responses to Delphi survey items, together with the level of agreement reached
| Item | Result | Level agreement | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Factors that will have an impact on the increased prevalence of LCSs and on the Spanish National Health Service in the next 10 years | Yes, it will have an impact on | ||
| 1. Medical-therapeutic and technological improvements | C | ||
| 2. Changes in population lifestyles | C | ||
| 3. Public access to health services | C | ||
| 4. The coexistence of comorbidities will have an impact on the emergence of new cancer subpopulations that will increase the complexity of care | C | ||
| Cancer care planning forecasts for the next 10 years | Desired | Actual | |
| 5. Oncology planning will address the need to correct territorial inequalities between communities through the appropriate allocation of the necessary resources | No (71%) | C/M | |
| 6. Oncology planning will address access to more personalised therapies | U/C | ||
| 7. Oncology planning will be included in the care plans for LCSs and will take the increase in their prevalence into account | U/C | ||
| 8. Oncology planning for LCS patient care will improve interaction between primary care and hospital care | U/C | ||
| Care and care coordination model forecasts for the next 10 years | Desired | Actual | |
| 9. The model must contemplate the creation of a hospital oncology care network and concentrate diagnostic-therapeutic activities, as well as optimising care resources | Yes (57%) | C/D | |
| 10. The model must promote the establishment of a nationwide population-based cancer register | C/C | ||
| 11. The role of nursing in the care of LCS patients will become more important | C/C | ||
| 12. The LCS patient care process will involve multidisciplinary care | U/C | ||
| 13. An EPI (extended programme on immunisation) covering all levels of care will be defined | Yes (77%) | C/M | |
| 14. The model should consider increased collaboration between medical oncology and primary care | U/C | ||
| 15. The clinical management of LCSs will have primary care as its focus | No (60%) | C/D | |
| 16. All LCS patients will have a case manager who will coordinate the different concurrent services and act as an accessible point of reference | No (69%) | C/M | |
| 17. Single points will be set up for appointment scheduling and for the collection of results in order to improve the interactive nature of care procedures | No (61%) | C/D | |
| Forecasts for the next 10 years with regard to the development of clinical care protocols and cancer treatment decisions | |||
| 18. Protocols must be stratified according to LCS patient needs (chronicity, comorbidity, fragility, etc.) and risks (survival, progression-free, quality of life, etc.) | C/C | ||
| 19. The protocols must consider early detection and the addressing of common problems in LCS patients (asthenia, pain, depression, etc.) | C/C | ||
| 20. The protocols must emphasise the early detection of relapses and second tumours | C/C | ||
| 21. The protocols will include criteria for detecting the adverse effects of treatments, their possible sequelae and iatrogenesis in general | U/C | ||
| 22. It is essential that the communication process between the patient, the acute centre, primary care and social and health centres will improve | U/C | ||
| 23. Therapeutic decision making must consider the specific characteristics of each patient, the risk of toxicity associated with each patient's systemic conditions at all times and the patient's own expectations | U/C | ||
| 24. Therapeutic decision-making support algorithms will be required based on the LCS patient's clinical presentation | C/C | ||
| 25. National | No (59%) | C/D | |
| Oncology service portfolio and core common portfolio forecasts for the next 10 years | |||
| 26. The clinical needs of LCSs will require redesigning the service portfolio for oncology services | C/C | ||
| 27. Care circuits in A&E will have to be set up to make it possible to consider referring LCS patients to the oncology service based on the reason for consultation | Yes (56%) | C/ | |
| 28. Including social workers in oncology services is key to providing the LCS patient with appropriate care | No (56%) | C/D | |
| 29. Including palliative care specialists in oncology services is key to providing LCS patients with appropriate care | C/C | ||
| 30. Psycho-oncology will play a decisive role in the perception of quality of life by LCS patients and their relatives and/or the context in which they live | C/C | ||
| 31. Cancer care will be increased for LCS patients | C/C | ||
| 32. Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment will be a useful tool in the care of elderly LCS patients | C/C | ||
| 33. The development of care pathways between oncology and home care professionals will be a solution for alleviating congestion in hospitals and for improving cancer education for LCS patients and the context in which they live | No (72%) | C/M | |
| 34. The home pharmaceutical service will be made more general, with the dispensing of drugs to the LCS patient's home ( | No (70%) | C/M | |
| Forecasts for the next 10 years with regard to the availability of resources and the funding of LCS care | Desired | Actual | |
| 35. Resource limitation will complicate the selection of therapeutic alternatives for certain types of LCS patients | C/C | ||
| 36. Cost–benefit analysis will be used for therapeutic decision making | C/C | ||
| 37. Acute beds will need to be converted at medium/long-stay hospitals for optimising LCS patient care resource management | No (51%) | C/ | |
| 38. Rural home care management will need to be optimised to enable efficient home hospitalisation | Yes (62%) | C/D | |
| 39. For certain types of LCS patients, to define and enhance the areas of palliative care that could be extended to primary care and that in some cases is currently provided in hospital care | C/C | ||
| 40. Given the epidemiological scenario and the envisaged increase in the prevalence of LCSs, new funding variables that respond to new care scenarios will be considered | Yes (64%) | C/D | |
| 41. Clinical and care outcomes will influence funding for oncology services | Yes (65%) | C/D | |
| 42. The care centre funding model will be changed to a care programme funding model | C/C | ||
| 43. There will be a tendency to centralise the purchase of drugs and other health technologies in order to reduce their cost | C/C | ||
| Forecasts for the next 10 years with regard to the funding of drugs and other health technologies | |||
| 44. Efficacy and safety will be decisive in determining the basis for funding new drugs and other health technologies in some LCS patient categories | C/C | ||
| 45. The cost-effectiveness criterion will be used to determine the funding of new drugs and other health technologies in some LCS patient categories | C/C | ||
| 46. The cost of treatments will be determined in accordance with their value in terms of health outcomes in some LCS patient categories | C/C | ||
| 47. Investment/disinvestment criteria for drug and other healthcare technology funding will be applied in some LCS patient categories | C/C | ||
| Forecasts for the next 10 years with regard to care process assessment measures | Desired | Actual | |
| 48. LCS-specific efficacy and safety indicators will be used | C/C | ||
| 49. Indicators will be defined to evaluate the entire LCS care process (primary care, hospital care, home care) in an integrated way | Yes (62%) | C/D | |
| 50. Sufficient means will be made available for carrying out an evaluation of the indicators | C/C | ||
| 51. The health results obtained by each hospital in relation to LCS patients will be published regularly | C/C | ||
| 52. Evaluation results will be used in care decision making | No (57%) | C/D | |
| Health professional training forecasts for the next 10 Years | It is important | ||
| 53. Training all healthcare professionals involved in the care process with regard to the needs of LCS patients throughout the process | C | ||
| 54. Joint training of oncologists, nurses, hospital pharmacists and primary care specialists | C | ||
| 55. Specific training in LCS patient safety taking into account the comorbidities associated with these patients | C | ||
| 56. Shared decision-making training (for the entire care process) for all healthcare professionals | C | ||
| Forecasts for the next 10 years with regard to the role of the LCS patient in the care process | Desired | Actual | |
| 57. The normalisation of the LCS patient as a chronic patient will be decisive in optimising their quality of life | C/C | ||
| 58. Awareness-raising campaigns will be carried out to destigmatise the LCS patient, especially for certain types of cancer | C/C | ||
| 59. The involvement of patients (and their carers) in the design and development of clinical care processes and protocols will be key for ensuring their suitability | Yes (73%) | C/M | |
| 60. The patient will be involved in shared decision making at different points in the care process | C/C | ||
| 61. Patient associations will be encouraged to contribute to empowering the LCS patient | C/C | ||
| 62. LCS patients and their close family will be trained with a view to promoting healthy lifestyles | U/C | ||
| 63. LCS patients will be trained for involvement in the management of their disease | C/C | ||
| ICT forecasts for the next 10 years | Desired | Actual | |
| 64. Telemedicine (two-way e-health platforms) will be widely used to facilitate communication and the transmission of information during all healthcare processes between different professionals and between professionals and LCS patients | C/C | ||
| 65. An integrated computerised medical record will be available for medical professionals at all levels of care provided to LCS patients, including an alert system to avoid duplication | C/C | ||
| 66. Computer systems will be available for integrating clinical databases and for the creation of shared databases between various hospitals (Big Data) in order to generate evidence through real practice ( | C/C | ||
| 67. ICTs will be available to monitor compliance with the LCS patient's prescribed treatment | C/C | ||
| Research forecasts for the next 10 Years | Desired | Actual | |
| 68. To have up-to-date information on ongoing clinical trials and patient selection criteria | Yes (70%) | C/M | |
| 69. To conduct more research on the impact patient involvement has on the care process | No (52%) | C/D | |
| 70. To conduct cost-effectiveness studies on new treatments | C/C | ||
| 71. To conduct LCS patient quality of life studies | C/C | ||
| 72. To conduct LCS patient treatment compliance studies | Yes (78%) | C/M | |
| 73. To conduct studies on the extent to which the recommendations in the Clinical Practice Guidelines are implemented by heath care professionals | Yes (52%) | C/D | |
| 74. To conduct studies on the side effects of drugs in actual clinical practice | C/C | ||
| 75. To conduct research on mechanisms that allow the personalisation of treatments | C/C | ||
| Forecasts for the next 10 years with regard to access to new therapies | Desired | Actual | |
| 76. Access to molecular diagnosis will be rolled out for all LCS patients | No (62%) | C/D | |
| 77. The use of the same diagnostic and technological resources will be guaranteed regardless of the LCS patient's point of access to the healthcare system | No (76%) | U/M | |
| 78. Access to genetic advice for informed decision making will be provided for all Spanish National Health Service users | No (53%) | C/D | |
| 79. The system will establish technical criteria for prioritising access to genetic counselling | C/C | ||
| 80. Shared risk strategies between management and industry will address the policy of greater access to therapeutic innovation and the drive for continuous research into therapeutic innovation | No (56%) | C/D | |
| Barriers to be overcome during the transformation process | Difficult to overcome | ||
| 81. Healthcare professionals' resistance to change | C | ||
| 82. Decentralisation of the Spanish National Health Service | C | ||
| 83. The tendency to work individually in each specialty and/or at each level of care | C | ||
| 84. Lack of support from hospital and primary care management | C | ||
| 85. Lack of political and institutional support | C | ||
| 86. Lack of financial resources | C | ||
| 87. Lack of studies and functional population records ( | C | ||
| 88. Lack of social awareness of the existence of LCS patients | 67% | M | |
| 89. Stigmatisation of cancer for certain types of cancer | 62% | D | |
| 90. Lack of tools to assess the actual needs of the LCS patient for the purpose of defining the patient-based care model | C | ||
Values in bold print indicate consensus. U: unanimity; C: consensus; M: majority; D: difference of opinion
(1) Unanimity: 100% expert panel agreement; (2) Consensus: 80–99% agreement; (3) Majority: 66–79% agreement; (4) Difference of opinion: agreement < 66%
Items were responded to on an either/or basis (yes/no) or using the Likert scale (5 and 4 levels of agreement in the first and second Delphi rounds, respectively)