Nilsen Marci Lee, Belsky Michael A, Scheff Nicole, Johnson Jonas T, Zandberg Dan P, Skinner Heath, Ferris Robert
School of Nursing, Department of Acute and Tertiary Care, University of Pittsburgh, 318A Victoria Building, 3500 Victoria Street, Pittsburgh, PA, 15261, USA.
School of Medicine, Department of Otolaryngology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Curr Treat Options Oncol. 2020 Oct 3;21(12):92. doi: 10.1007/s11864-020-00797-x.
The demographics of head and neck cancer (HNC) survivors are changing, contributing to a growing number of survivors and a greater length of survivorship. Curative treatment involves intense multimodal therapy, which contributes to both short-term toxicities and long-term treatment-related effects. Delivering high-quality, relevant cancer survivorship care is a growing national priority. Various survivorship models and tools, such as survivorship care plans, have been utilized in an attempt to enhance care and optimize outcomes. However, an essential, yet understudied, component of high-quality survivorship care is the identification and management of late and long-term treatment-related effects. In this article, we will describe the current advancements in survivorship care as well as the research related to late and long-term treatment effects. While there is a growing body of literature that describes the prevalence of treatment-related effects and their impact on quality of life, more work is needed. Research that investigates the interplay of these complex treatment effects, the biological mechanisms that contribute to their variability, and interventions designed to mitigate them are desperately needed. While de-intensification offers the potential to alleviate these effects for future survivors, we need clinically meaningful assessment tools and therapies to provide the survivors we evaluate and treat daily. Targeted patient-reported outcomes and objective measures validated through clinical research are needed to help us systematically identify and treat late and long-term effects. In order to tailor and optimize the care we provide to our HNC survivors, we will need to leverage these tools as well as the expertise of all members of our multidisciplinary survivorship teams.
头颈癌(HNC)幸存者的人口统计学特征正在发生变化,导致幸存者数量不断增加,生存时间也更长。根治性治疗需要强化多模式治疗,这会导致短期毒性反应和长期的治疗相关影响。提供高质量、相关的癌症生存护理已日益成为国家优先事项。各种生存模式和工具,如生存护理计划,已被用于试图改善护理并优化治疗结果。然而,高质量生存护理的一个重要但尚未得到充分研究的组成部分是对晚期和长期治疗相关影响的识别和管理。在本文中,我们将描述生存护理的当前进展以及与晚期和长期治疗效果相关的研究。虽然有越来越多的文献描述了治疗相关影响的发生率及其对生活质量的影响,但仍需要更多的研究。迫切需要开展研究,以探究这些复杂治疗效果之间的相互作用、导致其变异性的生物学机制以及旨在减轻这些影响的干预措施。虽然降低治疗强度有可能减轻未来幸存者的这些影响,但我们需要具有临床意义的评估工具和治疗方法,以便为我们每天评估和治疗的幸存者提供帮助。需要有针对性的患者报告结局和通过临床研究验证的客观测量方法,以帮助我们系统地识别和治疗晚期和长期影响。为了调整和优化我们为头颈癌幸存者提供的护理,我们需要利用这些工具以及多学科生存护理团队所有成员的专业知识。