Department of Radiation Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 75 Francis Street. ASB1 - L2, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Marmara University Pendik Education and Research Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey.
BMC Cancer. 2022 May 12;22(1):532. doi: 10.1186/s12885-022-09558-5.
Access to cancer care is a problem that continues to plague refugees displaced from their home countries. The turbulent political crisis in Syria, which has led to millions of refugees seeking asylum in Turkey, merits further attention. We aimed to study the rate of utilization of radiation therapy among Syrian refugees with cancer living in Turkey in an attempt to identify the contributing factors predictive of non-compliance with prescribed RT.
In this retrospective review of 14 institutional databases, Syrian refugee patients in Turkey with a cancer diagnosis from January 2015 to December 2019 who were treated with RT were identified. The demographic data, treatment compliance rates, and toxicity outcomes in these patients were surveyed. Variable predictors of noncompliance such as age, sex, diagnosis, treatment length, and toxicity were studied. The association between these variables and patient noncompliance was determined.
We identified 10,537 patients who were diagnosed with cancer during the study period, of whom 1010 (9.6%) patients were treated with RT. Breast cancer (30%) and lung cancer (14%) were the most common diagnoses with up to 68% of patients diagnosed at an advanced stage (Stage III, IV). 20% of the patients were deemed noncompliant. Treatment with concurrent chemoradiotherapy (OR 1.61, 95% CI 1.06-2.46, p = 0.023) and living in a refugee camp (OR 3.62, 95% CI 2.43-5.19, p < 0.001) were associated with noncompliance. Age, sex and treatment length were not significantly associated with noncompliance.
Noncompliance with radiotherapy among Syrian refugees in Turkey remains an area of concern with a multitude of factors contributing to these alarming numbers. Further studies to better ascertain the finer nuances of this intricately complex problem and a global combination of efforts can pave the way to providing a solution.
癌症治疗的可及性是一个持续困扰难民的问题,这些难民因本国的动荡政治危机而背井离乡。叙利亚的政治危机导致数以百万计的难民逃往土耳其,这值得进一步关注。我们旨在研究居住在土耳其的叙利亚癌症难民接受放射治疗的比例,试图确定导致不遵守规定放射治疗的预测因素。
本回顾性研究分析了 2015 年 1 月至 2019 年 12 月期间在土耳其接受放射治疗的叙利亚难民患者的 14 个机构数据库。调查了这些患者的人口统计学数据、治疗依从率和毒性结果。研究了年龄、性别、诊断、治疗时间和毒性等可变预测因素与不依从的关系。确定了这些变量与患者不依从的关系。
在研究期间,我们共确定了 10537 名患有癌症的患者,其中 1010 名(9.6%)患者接受了放射治疗。乳腺癌(30%)和肺癌(14%)是最常见的诊断,高达 68%的患者处于晚期(III 期和 IV 期)。20%的患者被认为不遵守治疗方案。接受同期放化疗(OR 1.61,95%CI 1.06-2.46,p=0.023)和居住在难民营(OR 3.62,95%CI 2.43-5.19,p<0.001)与不依从有关。年龄、性别和治疗时间与不依从无显著相关性。
土耳其叙利亚难民放射治疗的不依从仍然是一个令人关注的问题,有许多因素导致了这一令人震惊的数字。进一步的研究可以更好地确定这一复杂问题的细微差别,全球共同努力可以为提供解决方案铺平道路。