Cancer Clinical Trials, University College Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
Department of Oncology, University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2019 Apr 20;9(4):e027797. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027797.
International recognition of the unique needs of young people with cancer is growing. Many countries have developed specialist age-appropriate cancer services believing them to be of value. In England, 13 specialist principal treatment centres (PTCs) deliver cancer care to young people. Despite this expansion of specialist care, systematic investigation of associated outcomes and costs has, to date, been lacking. The aim of this paper is to describe recruitment and baseline characteristics of the BRIGHTLIGHT cohort and the development of the bespoke measures of levels of care and disease severity, which will inform the evaluation of cancer services in England.
Prospective, longitudinal, observational study.
Ninety-seven National Health Service hospitals in England.
A total of 1114 participants were recruited and diagnosed between July 2012 and December 2014: 55% (n=618) were men, mean age was 20.1 years (SD=3.3), most (86%) were white and most common diagnoses were lymphoma (31%), germ cell tumour (19%) and leukaemia (13%).
At diagnosis, median quality of life score was significantly lower than a published control threshold (69.7 points); 40% had borderline to severe anxiety, and 21% had borderline to severe depression. There was minimal variation in other patient-reported outcomes according to age, diagnosis or severity of illness. Survival was lower in the cohort than for young people diagnosed during the same period who were not recruited (cumulative survival probability 4 years after diagnosis: 88% vs 92%).
Data collection was completed in March 2018. Longitudinal comparisons will determine outcomes and costs associated with access/exposure to PTCs. Findings will inform international intervention and policy initiatives to improve outcomes for young people with cancer.
国际上对癌症青年群体特殊需求的认识正在不断提高。许多国家已经建立了专门针对特定年龄的癌症服务机构,认为这是有价值的。在英国,13 个专门的主要治疗中心(PTC)为年轻人提供癌症治疗。尽管专科护理服务不断扩大,但迄今为止,对相关结果和成本的系统调查仍有所欠缺。本文旨在描述 BRIGHTLIGHT 队列的招募情况和基线特征,并制定专门的护理水平和疾病严重程度评估方法,为评估英国的癌症服务提供信息。
前瞻性、纵向、观察性研究。
英国 97 家国民保健署医院。
共有 1114 名参与者于 2012 年 7 月至 2014 年 12 月期间被确诊:55%(n=618)为男性,平均年龄 20.1 岁(SD=3.3),大多数(86%)为白人,最常见的诊断为淋巴瘤(31%)、生殖细胞瘤(19%)和白血病(13%)。
在诊断时,生活质量评分中位数显著低于已公布的对照组阈值(69.7 分);40%有边缘性至严重焦虑,21%有边缘性至严重抑郁。根据年龄、诊断或疾病严重程度,其他患者报告的结果变化很小。该队列的生存率低于同期未入组的年轻患者(诊断后 4 年的累积生存率:88%比 92%)。
数据收集于 2018 年 3 月完成。纵向比较将确定与 PTC 接触/暴露相关的结果和成本。研究结果将为改善癌症青年患者的治疗效果提供国际干预和政策倡议依据。