Department of Radiation Oncology, Miami Cancer Institute, Baptist Health South Florida, United States.
Department of Clinical Informatics, Miami Cancer Institute, Baptist Health South Florida, United States.
Radiother Oncol. 2022 May;170:102-110. doi: 10.1016/j.radonc.2021.12.028. Epub 2021 Dec 28.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the utility and value of an institutional, multi-disciplinary radiation oncology team review process prior to radiotherapy (RT) simulation.
Over a period of 3 months and through an iterative team-based process, a standardized simulation requisition directive (SSRD) was developed, piloted, modified, and subsequently implemented for all patients treated with external beam RT at a single tertiary care institution from January to December 2020. The SSRDs were reviewed at a daily multi-disciplinary radiation oncology team review conference; modifications consequential to the review were prospectively recorded in a quality database.
1500 consecutive SSRDs were prospectively reviewed for this study. 397 modifications on 290 (19.3%) SSRDs were recorded and parsed into 5 main categories and 18 subcategories. The most common modifications resulted from changes in immobilization device (n = 88, 22.2%), RT care path (n = 56, 14.1%), and arm positioning (n = 43, 10.8%). On univariate analysis, modifications were associated with RT intent, scan parameters, tumor site, and consultation type. An increased rate modifications was observed for patients had telemedicine consults (n = 101, 22.7%) compared to in-person consultations (n = 189, 17.9%) (p = 0.032). Using logistic regression analysis, there was also a statistically significant relationship between postoperative RT delivery and modification rates (OR: 2.913, 95% CI: 1.014-8.372) (p = 0.0126). Overall, only 14 patients (0.9%) needed re-simulation during the entire study period.
Prospective multi-disciplinary radiation oncology team review prior to simulation identifies actionable change in approximately 19% of procedures, and results in an extremely low rate (<1%) of re-simulation. As departmental processes transition to virtual platforms, thorough attention is needed to identify patients at higher risk of simulation modifications.
本研究的主要目的是评估在放射治疗(RT)模拟之前进行机构多学科放射肿瘤团队审查的效用和价值。
在 3 个月的时间内,通过迭代的团队为基础的过程,制定了一个标准化的模拟申请指令(SSRD),并在 2020 年 1 月至 12 月期间对在一家三级保健机构接受外照射 RT 治疗的所有患者进行了试点、修改,并随后实施。在每日多学科放射肿瘤学团队审查会议上审查了 SSRD;审查后对修改内容进行前瞻性记录在质量数据库中。
本研究前瞻性地审查了 1500 份连续的 SSRD。记录了 290 份 SSRD(19.3%)上的 397 次修改,并分为 5 个主要类别和 18 个子类别。最常见的修改是由于固定装置(n=88,22.2%)、RT 护理路径(n=56,14.1%)和手臂定位(n=43,10.8%)的变化而导致的。单因素分析表明,修改与 RT 意图、扫描参数、肿瘤部位和咨询类型有关。与门诊咨询患者(n=101,22.7%)相比,接受远程医疗咨询的患者(n=189,17.9%)的修改率更高(p=0.032)。使用逻辑回归分析,术后 RT 治疗与修改率之间也存在统计学显著关系(OR:2.913,95%CI:1.014-8.372)(p=0.0126)。总体而言,整个研究期间仅 14 名患者(0.9%)需要重新模拟。
模拟前的前瞻性多学科放射肿瘤团队审查可识别约 19%的操作中的可操作更改,并导致重新模拟的极低发生率(<1%)。随着部门流程过渡到虚拟平台,需要彻底关注识别模拟修改风险较高的患者。