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一种满足无法治愈的头颈癌患者及其家属需求的网络方法。

A network approach to addressing the needs of patients with incurable head and neck cancer and their families.

作者信息

Patterson Joanne M, Mayland Catriona R, Bath Peter, Lawton Michelle, Bryant Valerie, Hamilton David, Hasan Madina, Stone Tony, Campbell Richard, Crum Annabel, Sharp Linda

机构信息

School of Allied Healthcare Professionals and Nursing/Liverpool Head and Neck Centre, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.

School of Medicine and Population Health, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.

出版信息

Health Technol Assess. 2025 Apr 30:1-29. doi: 10.3310/TKLD6486.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Patients with incurable head and neck cancer have considerable unmet needs and complex symptom burden, with evidence of substantial geographical and/or socioeconomic inequalities. Accurate information on healthcare needs, resource utilisation and service provision in the last year of life is lacking. This places limits on service delivery planning and the development and testing of interventions to better meet needs. Our partnership spans three regions, which nationally have some of the highest rates of incurable head and neck cancer.

AIMS

The overall aims were to (1) establish a palliative head and neck cancer partnership, (2) identify and evaluate routine incurable head and neck cancer data sources and utilise these to develop and address research priorities.

OBJECTIVES

O1. Develop a palliative head and neck cancer network within the North of England, representing a geographical area with high incidence of incurable head and neck cancer and palliative care needs. O2. Develop and refine research questions and priorities. O3. Engage with data providers to identify relevant data sets and specific data fields to understand the potential quality and utility of these to inform research priorities.

METHODS

There were three interconnected work packages: WP1: A 'snowballing' approach to establish a network of clinicians, researchers, patient and public representatives, data architects and key stakeholders with an interest in head and neck cancer palliative care. WP2: A Delphi consensus process to develop and refine research questions and priorities, based on national guidance and systematic reviews of evidence gaps. WP3: Identification of national and local data sets and exploration of the potential data quality and utility, and associated information governance processes for access.

RESULTS

WP1: A diverse network was established, encompassing members from a wide range of professions and patient/carer groups. WP2: The Delphi consisted of two rounds involving up to 66 participants. Consensus was reached on 12 research questions representing 4 key areas of prioritisation: service provision, symptom management, psychosocial support and information provision and communication. WP3: A range of national and local data sources were identified as having the potential to address the research priorities. A directory of data sources was developed. Working in an iterative way, data sets and relevant data fields were mapped to the 12 potential research priority areas to assess the applicability of using routine data to address these priorities.

LIMITATIONS

Approximately, one-third of participants in the Delphi process dropped out in round 2. Despite attempts to be flexible in our approach, retaining participants, particularly for patients and their families on a palliative care pathway, is challenging.

FUTURE WORK

The established network and consensus exercise form the basis for future service evaluations and collaborative research. These will be based on gaps and priorities agreed by patients, their families and a range of other stakeholders.

CONCLUSIONS

The network has established a cross-sectoral collaboration for improving incurable head and neck cancer and a platform to identify 12 research priority areas. Utilising routine data to address these priorities remains a challenging area, and a range of methodological research approaches will be required to take this forward.

FUNDING

This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme as award number NIHR135361.

摘要

背景

无法治愈的头颈癌患者有大量未得到满足的需求且症状负担复杂,有证据表明存在显著的地理和/或社会经济不平等。缺乏关于临终前一年医疗保健需求、资源利用和服务提供的准确信息。这限制了服务提供规划以及为更好满足需求而开展的干预措施的开发与测试。我们的合作涉及三个地区,在全国范围内,这些地区的无法治愈的头颈癌发病率处于较高水平。

目的

总体目标是(1)建立一个姑息性头颈癌合作关系,(2)识别和评估常规的无法治愈的头颈癌数据源,并利用这些数据源来确定和解决研究重点。

目标

O1. 在英格兰北部建立一个姑息性头颈癌网络,该地区无法治愈的头颈癌发病率高且有姑息治疗需求。O2. 制定并完善研究问题和重点。O3. 与数据提供者合作,识别相关数据集和特定数据字段,以了解这些数据对确定研究重点的潜在质量和效用。

方法

有三个相互关联的工作包:工作包1:采用“滚雪球”方法建立一个由临床医生、研究人员、患者和公众代表、数据架构师以及对头颈癌姑息治疗感兴趣的关键利益相关者组成的网络。工作包2:基于国家指南和对证据差距的系统评价,采用德尔菲共识法来制定并完善研究问题和重点。工作包3:识别国家和地方数据集,探索潜在的数据质量和效用,以及相关的信息治理流程以获取数据。

结果

工作包1:建立了一个多元化的网络,涵盖了来自广泛职业和患者/护理群体的成员。工作包2:德尔菲法包括两轮,最多有66名参与者。就代表4个优先排序关键领域的12个研究问题达成了共识:服务提供、症状管理、心理社会支持以及信息提供与沟通。工作包3:确定了一系列国家和地方数据源有潜力解决研究重点。编制了一份数据源目录。通过迭代方式,将数据集和相关数据字段映射到12个潜在的研究重点领域,以评估使用常规数据解决这些重点的适用性。

局限性

在德尔菲法过程中,大约三分之一的参与者在第二轮退出。尽管我们试图在方法上保持灵活性以留住参与者,尤其是处于姑息治疗路径上的患者及其家属,但这具有挑战性。

未来工作

已建立的网络和共识活动构成了未来服务评估和合作研究的基础。这些将基于患者、其家属以及一系列其他利益相关者商定的差距和重点。

结论

该网络建立了一个跨部门合作关系以改善无法治愈的头颈癌状况,并形成了一个确定12个研究重点领域的平台。利用常规数据解决这些重点仍然是一个具有挑战性的领域,需要一系列方法学研究方法来推进这一工作。

资金来源

本文介绍了由英国国家卫生与保健研究机构(NIHR)卫生技术评估计划资助的独立研究项目(资助编号NIHR135361)。

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