Department of Biomedical Engineering, Pratt School of Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States.
Duke School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2021 May 27;23(5):e23350. doi: 10.2196/23350.
Nearly 90% of deaths due to cervical cancer occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). In recent years, many digital health strategies have been implemented in LMICs to ameliorate patient-, provider-, and health system-level challenges in cervical cancer control. However, there are limited efforts to systematically review the effectiveness and current landscape of digital health strategies for cervical cancer control in LMICs.
We aim to conduct a systematic review of digital health strategies for cervical cancer control in LMICs to assess their effectiveness, describe the range of strategies used, and summarize challenges in their implementation.
A systematic search was conducted to identify publications describing digital health strategies for cervical cancer control in LMICs from 5 academic databases and Google Scholar. The review excluded digital strategies associated with improving vaccination coverage against human papillomavirus. Titles and abstracts were screened, and full texts were reviewed for eligibility. A structured data extraction template was used to summarize the information from the included studies. The risk of bias and data reporting guidelines for mobile health were assessed for each study. A meta-analysis of effectiveness was planned along with a narrative review of digital health strategies, implementation challenges, and opportunities for future research.
In the 27 included studies, interventions for cervical cancer control focused on secondary prevention (ie, screening and treatment of precancerous lesions) and digital health strategies to facilitate patient education, digital cervicography, health worker training, and data quality. Most of the included studies were conducted in sub-Saharan Africa, with fewer studies in other LMIC settings in Asia or South America. A low risk of bias was found in 2 studies, and a moderate risk of bias was found in 4 studies, while the remaining 21 studies had a high risk of bias. A meta-analysis of effectiveness was not conducted because of insufficient studies with robust study designs and matched outcomes or interventions.
Current evidence on the effectiveness of digital health strategies for cervical cancer control is limited and, in most cases, is associated with a high risk of bias. Further studies are recommended to expand the investigation of digital health strategies for cervical cancer using robust study designs, explore other LMIC settings with a high burden of cervical cancer (eg, South America), and test a greater diversity of digital strategies.
近 90%的宫颈癌死亡发生在中低收入国家(LMICs)。近年来,许多数字健康策略已在 LMICs 中实施,以改善宫颈癌控制方面的患者、提供者和卫生系统层面的挑战。然而,在系统地审查数字健康策略在 LMICs 中用于宫颈癌控制的有效性和现状方面,努力有限。
我们旨在对 LMICs 中用于宫颈癌控制的数字健康策略进行系统评价,以评估其有效性,描述所使用策略的范围,并总结实施过程中的挑战。
从 5 个学术数据库和 Google Scholar 中进行了系统搜索,以确定描述 LMICs 中用于宫颈癌控制的数字健康策略的出版物。该综述排除了与提高人乳头瘤病毒疫苗接种覆盖率相关的数字策略。筛选标题和摘要,并对全文进行评估以确定其是否符合入选标准。使用结构化数据提取模板从纳入研究中总结信息。对每项研究的移动健康风险和数据报告指南进行了评估。计划对有效性进行 meta 分析,并对数字健康策略、实施挑战和未来研究机会进行叙述性综述。
在 27 项纳入研究中,用于宫颈癌控制的干预措施侧重于二级预防(即癌前病变的筛查和治疗)和数字健康策略,以促进患者教育、数字宫颈照相、卫生工作者培训和数据质量。纳入的大多数研究都是在撒哈拉以南非洲进行的,而在亚洲或南美洲其他 LMIC 环境中进行的研究较少。2 项研究的风险较低,4 项研究的风险为中度,而其余 21 项研究的风险较高。由于缺乏具有稳健研究设计和匹配结局或干预措施的研究,因此未进行有效性的 meta 分析。
目前关于数字健康策略在宫颈癌控制中的有效性的证据有限,而且在大多数情况下,风险较高。建议进一步研究使用稳健研究设计扩大对宫颈癌数字健康策略的调查,探索宫颈癌负担较高的其他 LMIC 环境(例如南美洲),并测试更多种类的数字策略。