National Center for Rehabilitative Auditory Research, VA Portland Health Care System, 3710 SW US Veterans Hospital Road, P5-NCRAR, Portland, OR, 97239, USA.
Department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
J Cancer Surviv. 2023 Feb;17(1):69-81. doi: 10.1007/s11764-022-01316-7. Epub 2023 Feb 2.
Platinum-based chemotherapies used to treat many types of cancers are ototoxic. Ototoxicity management (OtoM) to mitigate the ototoxic outcomes of cancer survivors is recommended practice yet it is not a standard part of oncologic care. Although more than 10,000 patients each year are treated with platinum-based chemotherapies at the US Veterans Health Administration (VA), the current state of OtoM in VA is not well-defined. This study reports on a national survey of VA audiologists' perceptions regarding OtoM in cancer patients.
A 26-item online survey was administered to VA audiologists and service chiefs across the VA's 18 regional systems of care. Descriptive statistics and deductive thematic analysis were used to analyze the data.
The 61 respondents included at least one from each VA region. All reported they felt some form of OtoM was necessary for at-risk cancer patients. A pre-treatment baseline, the ability to detect ototoxicity early, and management of ototoxic effects both during and after treatment were considered high value objectives of OtoM by respondents. Roughly half reported routinely providing these services for patients receiving cisplatin and carboplatin. Respondents disagreed regarding appropriate hearing testing schedules and how to co-manage OtoM responsibilities with oncology. They identified barriers to care that conformed to three themes: care and referral coordination with oncology, audiology workload, and lack of protocols.
Although VA audiologists value providing OtoM for cancer patients, only about half perform OtoM for highly ototoxic treatment regimens. The OtoMIC survey provides clinician perspectives to benchmark and address OtoM care gaps.
Collaboration between oncology and audiology is needed to improve current OtoM processes, so that cancer survivors can have more control over their long term hearing health.
用于治疗多种癌症的铂类化疗药物具有耳毒性。建议采取耳毒性管理(OtoM)来减轻癌症幸存者的耳毒性后果,但它不是肿瘤学护理的标准部分。尽管每年有超过 10000 名患者在美国退伍军人健康管理局(VA)接受铂类化疗药物治疗,但 VA 中的 OtoM 现状尚不清楚。本研究报告了一项针对 VA 听力学家对癌症患者 OtoM 看法的全国性调查。
向 VA 的 18 个区域护理系统中的 VA 听力学家和服务主管进行了一项 26 项在线调查。使用描述性统计和演绎主题分析来分析数据。
61 名受访者包括 VA 每个地区的至少一名代表。所有人都报告说,他们认为对于有风险的癌症患者,某种形式的 OtoM 是必要的。治疗前的基线、早期检测耳毒性的能力以及在治疗期间和之后管理耳毒性的影响,被受访者认为是 OtoM 的高价值目标。大约一半的受访者报告说,他们为接受顺铂和卡铂治疗的患者常规提供这些服务。受访者不同意适当的听力测试时间表,以及如何与肿瘤学共同管理 OtoM 职责。他们确定了符合三个主题的护理障碍:与肿瘤学的护理和转介协调、听力科工作量以及缺乏方案。
尽管 VA 听力学家重视为癌症患者提供 OtoM,但只有大约一半的人为高耳毒性治疗方案提供 OtoM。OtoMIC 调查提供了临床医生的观点,以基准和解决 OtoM 护理差距。
需要肿瘤学和听力科之间的合作,以改善当前的 OtoM 流程,以便癌症幸存者能够更好地控制自己的长期听力健康。