Salem A, AlSamarat F, Farhan F
Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Biochemistry, The Hashemite University, Zarqa, Jordan; Division of Cancer Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK; Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK.
Department of Anatomy, Physiology and Biochemistry, The Hashemite University, Zarqa, Jordan.
Clin Oncol (R Coll Radiol). 2025 Feb;38:103569. doi: 10.1016/j.clon.2024.04.008. Epub 2024 Apr 21.
Cancer is a leading cause of death globally. Over 70% of the 10 million cancer deaths worldwide in 2020 occurred in low- and middle-income countries. Radiotherapy is an important cancer treatment, used in half of cancer patients. Significant global disparities in radiotherapy access exist, with low access in low- and middle-income countries. The benefits of tele-radiotherapy in low- and middle-income countries for expanding global radiotherapy access are yet to be fully realized. In this paper, we highlight potential applications of tele-radiotherapy in expanding access to high-quality radiotherapy in developing countries.
We performed a literature search to retrieve studies involving telemedicine applications in radiotherapy to provide a comprehensive overview of the topic. PubMed database served as the main source for retrieving studies, using the following search terms: ("telemedicine", "radiotherapy", "telehealth", "remote monitoring", "oncology", and "remote training"). Additional selected papers were obtained from Web of Science, and Google Scholar using the same search terms.
Telemedicine in radiotherapy has many applications. Virtual training could upgrade radiotherapy skills in low- and middle-income countries, enabling safe adoption of new radiotherapy techniques and quality assurance. Tele-radiotherapy consultations and patient follow-up could improve the efficiency of clinics while tele-radiotherapy planning and peer-review could enable equitable global access to radiotherapy expertise. Telemedicine could also facilitate wider global access to radiotherapy trials. While telemedicine in radiotherapy holds significant promise in improving global radiotherapy access, several barriers to its adoption exist. These include a lack of infrastructure, data security concerns, regulatory challenges, resistance from providers and patients, financial constraints, miscommunication during remote consultations, and lack of training.
Tele-radiotherapy applications hold promise in providing solutions to overcome global radiotherapy access inequity but the benefits of tele-radiotherapy in low- and middle-income countries are yet to be fully realized.
癌症是全球主要的死亡原因。2020年全球1000万癌症死亡病例中,超过70%发生在低收入和中等收入国家。放射治疗是一种重要的癌症治疗方法,半数癌症患者都会使用。全球在放射治疗可及性方面存在显著差异,低收入和中等收入国家的可及性较低。远程放射治疗在低收入和中等收入国家对扩大全球放射治疗可及性的益处尚未得到充分实现。在本文中,我们强调了远程放射治疗在扩大发展中国家高质量放射治疗可及性方面的潜在应用。
我们进行了文献检索,以获取涉及远程医疗在放射治疗中应用的研究,从而全面概述该主题。PubMed数据库作为检索研究的主要来源,使用以下检索词:(“远程医疗”、“放射治疗”、“远程健康”、“远程监测”、“肿瘤学”和“远程培训”)。使用相同的检索词从Web of Science和谷歌学术搜索中获取其他选定的论文。
远程医疗在放射治疗中有许多应用。虚拟培训可以提升低收入和中等收入国家的放射治疗技能,使新的放射治疗技术得以安全采用并进行质量保证。远程放射治疗会诊和患者随访可以提高诊所的效率,而远程放射治疗计划制定和同行评审可以使全球公平获得放射治疗专业知识。远程医疗还可以促进全球更广泛地参与放射治疗试验。虽然放射治疗中的远程医疗在改善全球放射治疗可及性方面具有巨大潜力,但在采用过程中存在一些障碍。这些障碍包括缺乏基础设施、数据安全问题、监管挑战、提供者和患者的抵触、资金限制、远程会诊期间的沟通不畅以及缺乏培训。
远程放射治疗应用有望为克服全球放射治疗可及性不平等问题提供解决方案,但远程放射治疗在低收入和中等收入国家的益处尚未得到充分实现。