Moerdler Scott, DuVall Adam S, Hayes-Lattin Brandon, Grimes Allison, Prasad Pinki K, Molina John C, Monga Varun, Freyer David R, Roth Michael E
Division of Pediatric Hematology Oncology, Department of Pediatrics, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA.
Section of Hematology/Oncology, Department of Medicine, University of Chicago Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol. 2024 Feb;13(1):97-104. doi: 10.1089/jayao.2023.0056. Epub 2023 Jul 21.
Adolescents and young adults (AYAs, 15-39 years) with cancer experience disparities in care and outcomes compared with older/younger patients. AYAs receive care from medical and pediatric oncologists, however, little is known about the extent of training fellows receive. This needs assessment evaluating current AYA oncology (AYA-O) education in pediatric and medical oncology fellowship programs to identify knowledge gaps for curricular development. An anonymous, cross-sectional, web-based survey developed by pediatric and medical oncologists was sent to medical ( = 178) and pediatric ( = 119) hematology/oncology program directors (PDs) at 251 sites in the United States. PDs were asked to participate and distribute the survey to their fellows. Survey questions addressed current AYA curriculum, provider comfort, and priorities for future AYA educational content. Participants from 69/251 programs responded (program response rate = 27%), including 51 PDs (32 pediatric, 19 medical oncology) and 58 fellows (33 pediatric, 25 medical oncology). Eighty-five percent of PDs (44/51) reported lacking formal AYA curricula. Of these, 80% (35/44) offer some topic-specific lectures, while 20% (9/44) provide little/no education for any topics. For nearly all topics, at least 45% of combined respondents reported little/no education. Respondents believe AYA topics are important for inclusion in future curricula. The most important topics for inclusion reported were oncofertility (82%), survivorship (78%), and communication (77%). There are large and actionable gaps in AYA-O education during fellowship training. Efforts are underway to develop AYA-O curriculum to provide both medical and pediatric oncology fellows with the knowledge and skills required to provide optimal AYA care.
与老年或年轻患者相比,患有癌症的青少年和青年(AYA,15至39岁)在医疗护理和治疗结果方面存在差异。AYA接受医学肿瘤学家和儿科肿瘤学家的治疗,然而,对于研究员接受培训的程度了解甚少。这项需求评估旨在评估儿科和医学肿瘤学 fellowship 项目中当前的青少年和青年肿瘤学(AYA - O)教育情况,以确定课程开发中的知识差距。由儿科和医学肿瘤学家开发的一项匿名、横断面、基于网络的调查问卷被发送给美国251个地点的医学(n = 178)和儿科(n = 119)血液学/肿瘤学项目主任(PD)。要求PD参与并将调查问卷分发给他们的研究员。调查问卷的问题涉及当前的AYA课程、提供者的舒适度以及未来AYA教育内容的重点。来自69/251个项目的参与者做出了回应(项目回应率 = 27%),包括51名PD(32名儿科,19名医学肿瘤学)和58名研究员(33名儿科,25名医学肿瘤学)。85%的PD(44/51)报告称缺乏正式的AYA课程。其中,80%(35/44)提供一些特定主题的讲座,而20%(9/44)几乎不提供或不提供任何主题的教育。对于几乎所有主题,至少45%的综合受访者报告称几乎没有接受过相关教育。受访者认为AYA主题对于纳入未来课程很重要。报告的最重要的纳入主题是肿瘤生育力(82%)、生存(78%)和沟通(77%)。在 fellowship 培训期间,AYA - O教育存在巨大且可采取行动的差距。目前正在努力开发AYA - O课程,为医学和儿科肿瘤学研究员提供提供最佳AYA护理所需的知识和技能。