Mechahougui Hiba, Yusof Harliana, Baudoux Nathalie, Acharige Shyamika, Friedlaender Alex
Oncology Department, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland.
Oncology Department, Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust, Portsmouth, UK.
Mediastinum. 2022 Jun 25;6:12. doi: 10.21037/med-21-26. eCollection 2022.
During the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, risks and priorities of oncologic care have required a thorough reassessment. The chance that fragile patients have exposure to infection during frequent hospital visits is an additional consideration for all therapeutic decisions. Patients with cancer, particularly those with lung cancer, have a greater chance of developing a severe form of COVID-19. Their increased risk is due to the immunosuppression associated with the chemotherapy itself, the underlying pulmonary compromise, which often accompanies lung malignancy or their general poor health. Oncology societies have given precise recommendations on the treatment modalities to be favoured, such as giving up specific palliative or adjuvant treatments, preferring shorter and less cytopenic therapies. In this review, we discussed how some of these curative treatments could be given by administering them at home. In this narrative review, we aim to see if it is safe and feasible to deliver home-administered oncologic intravenous treatments.
By narrative review, we looked for all the articles written in English describing home delivery chemotherapy or immunotherapy programs since 2019 that emerged or evolved during the COVID-19 pandemic. We added real-life data regarding the initiation of home immunotherapy in Portsmouth.
There is a growing body of evidence supporting the safety and feasibility of home-administered chemotherapy and immunotherapy treatments.
Home-administered chemotherapy and immunotherapy treatments are safe and feasible despite financial challenges, particularly about reimbursement by insurance companies and the loss of earnings for hospitals. Home treatments also require the careful selection of eligible patients and the training and organisation of specialised teams capable of managing the expected complications. It would be interesting to assess the risk-reduction in terms of infections and potential survival gains obtained by these programmes during the COVID pandemic.
在2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行期间,肿瘤护理的风险和优先事项需要进行全面重新评估。脆弱患者在频繁就医过程中接触感染的可能性是所有治疗决策的另一个考虑因素。癌症患者,尤其是肺癌患者,发生重症COVID-19的可能性更大。他们风险增加的原因是化疗本身导致的免疫抑制、潜在的肺部损害(这常伴随肺部恶性肿瘤)或他们总体健康状况较差。肿瘤学会已就应优先采用的治疗方式给出了精确建议,例如放弃特定的姑息或辅助治疗,选择疗程更短、导致血细胞减少程度更低的治疗方法。在本综述中,我们讨论了如何通过在家给药的方式进行其中一些根治性治疗。在本叙述性综述中,我们旨在探讨在家进行肿瘤静脉治疗是否安全可行。
通过叙述性综述,我们查找了自2019年以来用英文撰写的所有描述在COVID-19大流行期间出现或发展的家庭送药化疗或免疫治疗方案的文章。我们补充了朴茨茅斯家庭免疫治疗启动的实际数据。
越来越多的证据支持在家进行化疗和免疫治疗的安全性和可行性。
尽管存在财务挑战,尤其是保险公司报销和医院收入损失方面的问题,但在家进行化疗和免疫治疗是安全可行的。家庭治疗还需要仔细挑选符合条件的患者,以及培训和组建能够处理预期并发症的专业团队。评估这些方案在COVID大流行期间在降低感染风险和潜在生存获益方面的效果将会很有意思。