Aung Ye M, Waldman Jake, Jackson Jacquelyn, O'Connor Robert A, York Beth, Walsh Declan
Department of Supportive Oncology, Levine Cancer Institute, Atrium Health, Charlotte, NC, USA.
Wake Forest Baptist Comprehensive Cancer Center, Winston Salem, NC, USA.
Support Care Cancer. 2025 Jun 23;33(7):611. doi: 10.1007/s00520-025-09626-z.
Cancer care has changed dramatically in the past decade, with novel treatments and longer life expectancy. Despite these advancements, many people with cancer experience significant disease and treatment-related morbidity and mortality. The term "supportive oncology" has been proposed to define various services (nutrition counseling, palliative medicine, psychology, etc.) to support individuals throughout the cancer-care continuum. Though these services are vital, their availability, implementation, and organization are inconsistent and ill-defined.
We did a Google™ search to identify the availability of sixteen empirically determined supportive oncology services. Four distinct searches were performed sequentially with the terms, 1.) "supportive oncology programs", 2.) "supportive oncology departments", 3.) "cancer care support", and 4.) "cancer support programs." Results were filtered through ten further criteria. Descriptive language regarding service organization and leadership structure was reviewed.
All four searches in combination yielded 88 cancer care entities (CCE). Then, 32 (36%) were designated by the National Cancer Institute as a Comprehensive Cancer Center (NCI-CCC). Of all CCE, the most frequent service provided was support groups (76/88, 86%), and least often geriatric oncology (18/88, 21%). NCI-CCC offered a greater scope and scale of services than non-designated centers. Then, 45 (51%) CCE referred to these offerings as "services" but only 8 (9%) were organized as a formal department.
Heterogeneity exists in the types of supportive services provided by CCE. The predominant informal organization of supportive oncology services is notable and unsatisfactory. To improve comprehensive cancer care, there is a compelling need for organizations like the NCI, American Society of Clinical Oncology, and the Commission on Cancer to develop formal standards for supportive oncology services.
在过去十年中,癌症治疗发生了巨大变化,出现了新的治疗方法,患者预期寿命延长。尽管有这些进展,但许多癌症患者仍经历严重的疾病及与治疗相关的发病和死亡情况。“支持性肿瘤学”这一术语已被提出,用于定义在癌症治疗全过程中为患者提供支持的各种服务(营养咨询、姑息医学、心理学等)。尽管这些服务至关重要,但其可及性、实施情况和组织架构却不一致且定义不明确。
我们在谷歌™上进行搜索,以确定16项经实证确定的支持性肿瘤学服务的可及性。依次进行了四次不同的搜索,搜索词分别为:1.)“支持性肿瘤学项目”,2.)“支持性肿瘤学部门”,3.)“癌症护理支持”,4.)“癌症支持项目”。结果通过另外十条标准进行筛选。对有关服务组织和领导结构的描述性语言进行了审查。
四项搜索综合起来共产生了88个癌症护理实体(CCE)。其中,32个(36%)被美国国立癌症研究所指定为综合癌症中心(NCI - CCC)。在所有CCE中,提供最频繁的服务是支持小组(76/88,86%),提供最少的是老年肿瘤学服务(18/88,21%)。NCI - CCC提供的服务范围和规模比未指定的中心更大。其中,45个(51%)CCE将这些服务称为“服务”,但只有8个(9%)被组织成正式部门。
CCE提供的支持性服务类型存在异质性。支持性肿瘤学服务主要以非正式形式组织,这一点值得关注且不尽人意。为改善综合癌症护理,美国国立癌症研究所、美国临床肿瘤学会和癌症委员会等组织迫切需要制定支持性肿瘤学服务的正式标准。