Outpatient Cancer Care Delivery in the Context of E-Oncology: A French Perspective on “Cancer outside the Hospital Walls”
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Changes in Cancer Care
2.1. Epidemiological and Economic Constraints
2.2. Medical-Scientific Advances and Changes in Cancer Management
3. E-Health
4. Potential Impacts of E-Health in Oncology
4.1. Access to Information and Education
4.2. Prevention
4.3. Screening and Diagnosis
4.4. Treatment
4.5. Post-Treatment Follow-Up
5. Issues and Limits of “Cancer Outside the Hospital Walls”
5.1. For the Patients
5.2. For Health Care Professionals and Informal Caregivers
5.3. For Health Facilities
5.4. For the Public Authorities
6. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Field | Study Type | Cancer or Subjects Type | Number of Subjects | E-Health Tools Involved | Main Results of the Experimental vs. Control Arms | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Information Access | Randomized clinical trial, 4 arms (web applications vs. text messages vs. both vs. standard care) | Cutaneous cancer before Mohs micrographic surgery | 90 | Web applications and text messages for patient education | Reduction of patients’ preoperative anxiety | [25] |
Educating Health care professionals | Controlled clinical trial with concealed allocation, 2 arms (educational materials consistent with subjects’ preferences for learning vs. materials typical of the My Cancer Genome website) | Oncology health care professionals | 751 | Web-based | Improved learning with tailored, web-based learning style educational material | [26] |
Prevention | Randomized clinical trial, 2 arms (mobile application vs. control) | Adults from the Knowledge Panel, 18 years or older who owned an Android smartphone | 604 | Mobile application providing personalized, real-time sun protection advice | Improved sun protection | [27] |
Prevention | Randomized clinical trial, 2 arms (mobile application vs. control) | UK smokers willing to attempt quitting | 5800 | Periodic, motivational text messages on smartphones | Higher 6-month rate of biochemically-verified tobacco cessation | [28] |
Diagnosis | Prospective development of a non-invasive anemia screening tool | Patients with anemia of different etiologies and healthy subjects | 337 | Smartphone application and photos | Detection of anemia with an accuracy of ±2.4 g/dL (0.92 after personalized calibration) and a sensitivity of 97% when compared with blood count hemoglobin levels | [29] |
Diagnosis | Retrospective assessment of smartphone usage in telecytology | Different cytological materials | 172 | Smartphone photos transferred via WhatsApp® | High intraobserver Kappa agreement between microscopic diagnoses and smartphone image diagnoses; change in patient management in 11.4% of cases | [30] |
Treatment observance and tolerance | Randomized clinical trial, 2 arms (mobile games vs. standard care) | Patients with metastatic breast cancer planning to receive chemotherapy | 76 | Smartphone-based mobile games | Better patient education, improved drug compliance, decreased side effects, and better quality of life | [31] |
Treatment tolerance | Randomized clinical trial, 2 arms (automated home monitoring and follow-up vs. standard care) | Patients beginning chemotherapy | 358 | Symptom Care at Home (SCH) intervention | Reduction of clinical symptoms | [32] |
Treatment tolerance | Randomized clinical trial, 2 arms (Patient-Reported Outcomes (PROs)-based symptom monitoring vs. standard care) | Patients receiving outpatient chemotherapy for advanced solid tumors | 766 | PRO tablet computers | Improvements in health-related quality of life at 6 months, fewer admissions to hospitals or emergency rooms, better overall and quality-adjusted survivals | [33] |
Follow-up and survival | Randomized clinical trial, 2 arms (e-FAP-based follow-up vs. standard follow-up) | Patients with stage III/IV lung cancer | 121 | E-follow-up application (e-FAP) | Improved overall survival (median and 1-year overall survival); similar relapse rates, but better performance status at initial relapse, and better quality of life | [34] |
Strengths | Patients - More “actors in healthcare” for oral treatments - Downplay dramatization of diseases and treatments - Improved comfort/quality of life at home and work - Decreased time spent in transportation and “scary” waiting rooms - Greater autonomy in managing appointments - Greater equality in caregiver relationships - Broader and more rapid access to: medical files, second opinions, and disease and treatment information - Sharing of disease and treatment-related experiences (social networks, and forums) - Equal access to care Oncologists and Hospitals - Decision-making support (diagnosis, and treatment) - Information exchange between a city and rural medical centers - Optimization of medical resources: improved time management |
Weaknesses | - Novel and complex organization - Lack of coordination between healthcare professionals - Insufficient training of non-hospital personnel (doctors, pharmacists, nurses, etc.) with no current method of reimbursement - Insufficient digital training - “Bringing cancer back to home or work”, which could place further strain on familial and professional relationships (loss of confidence and trust) - Care for unsupported companions |
Opportunities | - Health care cost reduction - Increased cooperation between health care facilities (hospitals, cancer centers, rural health care providers, etc.) - Creation of new health care professions (coordination, and follow-up: nurse navigators) - Digital market |
Threats | - Patient–caregiver estrangement: feelings of loneliness and anxiety concerning the diseases and treatment toxicity - Virtual “less human” relationships - Trivialization of the burden of care - Poor grasp of the risks involved - Failure to comply with oral treatments - Digital divide (elderly, poorly educated, and foreigners) - Overbooking doctors (burnout) - Elimination of certain hospital functions |
© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Bertucci, F.; Le Corroller-Soriano, A.-G.; Monneur-Miramon, A.; Moulin, J.-F.; Fluzin, S.; Maraninchi, D.; Gonçalves, A. Outpatient Cancer Care Delivery in the Context of E-Oncology: A French Perspective on “Cancer outside the Hospital Walls”. Cancers 2019, 11, 219. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11020219
Bertucci F, Le Corroller-Soriano A-G, Monneur-Miramon A, Moulin J-F, Fluzin S, Maraninchi D, Gonçalves A. Outpatient Cancer Care Delivery in the Context of E-Oncology: A French Perspective on “Cancer outside the Hospital Walls”. Cancers. 2019; 11(2):219. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11020219
Chicago/Turabian StyleBertucci, François, Anne-Gaëlle Le Corroller-Soriano, Audrey Monneur-Miramon, Jean-François Moulin, Sylvain Fluzin, Dominique Maraninchi, and Anthony Gonçalves. 2019. "Outpatient Cancer Care Delivery in the Context of E-Oncology: A French Perspective on “Cancer outside the Hospital Walls”" Cancers 11, no. 2: 219. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11020219
APA StyleBertucci, F., Le Corroller-Soriano, A. -G., Monneur-Miramon, A., Moulin, J. -F., Fluzin, S., Maraninchi, D., & Gonçalves, A. (2019). Outpatient Cancer Care Delivery in the Context of E-Oncology: A French Perspective on “Cancer outside the Hospital Walls”. Cancers, 11(2), 219. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers11020219