(C) PLOS One
This story was originally published by PLOS One and is unaltered.
. . . . . . . . . .
You are special: The importance of identifying patients and their accompanying needs with metastatic breast cancer worldwide [1]
[]
Date: 2023-06-16 15:09:48+00:00
Authors: Hilde M. Buiting, PhD (1,2,3,4) Ikenna D. Ebuenyi, MBBS, PhD (5), Phyllis N. Butow, MPH, PhD (6)
Gabe S. Sonke, MD, PhD (1,2)
Antoni van Leeuwenhoek/Netherlands Cancer Institute, Amsterdam, the Netherlands University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands O2PZ, Platform of Palliative Care, Amsterdam, the Netherlands University Medical Center, Utrecht, the Netherlands Department of Rehabilitation Science and Technology, University of Pittsburgh, USA University of Sydney, School of Medical Psychology, Sydney, Australia
Ninety-two participants from 27 countries in one meeting
That is what the paper of Fallowfield et al1 is showing us. In a multidisciplinary meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology the gaps in the care and support for patients with advanced or metastatic breast cancer were globally discussed. Ninety-two participants from 27 countries – spread all over the world – attended a meeting in the role of either healthcare professional, patient or patient advocate.
Such meetings are not uncommon. It is therefore not really remarkable that this multi-disciplinary American Society of Clinical Oncology-meeting reported unmet supportive care-needs over the world. Patients with metastases face many challenges, in any country or care setting.2
However, it is also well-known that healthcare needs vary substantially according to disease severity and across and within low, middle-income (LMIC) and high-income countries (HIC).3 In this Blogpost, we would like to argue that ‘real-life’ global oncology can develop further if the focus is on similarities as well as differences across LMICs and HICs by taking experiences in actual medical practice as a starting point and by including a perspective from sociology/anthropology too.
Too general/fragmented recommendations in the context of treatment and care
First, just like the authors of Fallowfield et al reported, it frequently occurs that advanced breast cancer (ABC) and metastatic breast cancer (MBC) are mentioned, without clearly specifying in which disease phase the patients are in: Having MBC with a life-expectancy of approximately 1-3 months, is very different from having MBC for years while being in good physical condition. Furthermore, being diagnosed with MBC some months to years after an initial diagnosis treated with curative intent has a different impact than being confronted with primary MBC which is already advanced and no longer curable (in particular in LMICs).2 Both late-diagnosis of MBC as well as a poor prognosis, are more prevalent in LMIC than HIC where lack of resources and facilities may already limit optimal care and cure.3 4
Although the authors provide recommendations, many elements that happen in actual medical practice are not mentioned (which seems logical, given the timeline of this one single meeting). It is however important to make distinctions in how the needs of this MBC group differ from those of patients with curative disease or of those who are terminally ill. This is important in the contextualization of key messages per stage of the disease across countries. Moreover, the importance of appropriate communication need to be differentiated on the basis of the disease stage also. Apart from different care and treatment options across countries, nuances regarding culturally appropriate communication can be important too.5-8
Too general/fragmented recommendations in the context of organization of care
Second, the results from this multi-disciplinary American Society of Clinical Oncology-meeting show that organization of care was frequently defined as sub-optimal. This is not surprising either. Organization of care substantially differs across countries and therefore also warrants a more nuanced approach to depict a global perspective.9 Cancer registry data for instance, show how organization of care in HIC largely differ between hospitals10, whereas in LMIC, patients are already happy if they receive the appropriate care on-time, especially in an MBC situation.11 12 Concerns such as uncertainty about who will be the primary contact point (both as a healthcare professional as well as care taker) during the disease, is often irrelevant in LMIC, whereas in HIC (particularly among cancers that have already been studied extensively, such as MBC) this has become far more important.13
In summary, although we welcome global oncology meetings as a means to integrate various country-specific perspectives on treatment and care, differences, such as stage of disease and resources need to be considered to guarantee the success of such an approach. By including an anthropological/sociological perspective, the added value of such large international meetings could possibly be of additional value and the chance to guarantee ‘real’ global oncology will be higher. This is in line with a paper which was published by Khan et al,14 who report about the dangers of classifying countries as ‘rich’ or ‘poor’ since dichotomies create the sense of a hierarchy between people/countries. Possibly, by learning mutually across ‘low’, ‘middle’ and ‘high-income’ country contacts, global oncology (both in the context of appropriate treatment and care as well as on communication) will eventually become far more global.
[END]
---
[1] Url:
https://yoursay.plos.org/2023/06/you-are-special-the-importance-of-identifying-patients-and-their-accompanying-needs-with-metastatic-breast-cancer-worldwide/
Published and (C) by PLOS One
Content appears here under this condition or license: Creative Commons - Attribution BY 4.0.
via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds:
gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/plosone/