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Exploring the Use of a Digital Platform for Cancer Patients to Report Their Demographics, Disease and Therapy Characteristics, Age, and Educational Disparities: An Early-Stage Feasibility Study

Introduction: The increasing burden of cancer, the development of novel therapies, and the COVID-19 pandemic have made cancer care more complex. Digital innovation was then pushed toward developing platforms to facilitate access to cancer care. Age, education, and other disparities were, however, sh...

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Autores principales: Galiti, Dimitra, Linardou, Helena, Agelaki, Sofia, Karampeazis, Athanasios, Tsoukalas, Nikolaos, Psyrri, Amanda, Karamouzis, Michalis, Syrigos, Konstantinos N., Ardavanis, Alexandros, Athanasiadis, Ilias, Arvanitou, Eleni, Sgourou, Stavroula, Mala, Anastasia, Vallilas, Christos, Boukovinas, Ioannis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10453047/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37623032
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30080551
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author Galiti, Dimitra
Linardou, Helena
Agelaki, Sofia
Karampeazis, Athanasios
Tsoukalas, Nikolaos
Psyrri, Amanda
Karamouzis, Michalis
Syrigos, Konstantinos N.
Ardavanis, Alexandros
Athanasiadis, Ilias
Arvanitou, Eleni
Sgourou, Stavroula
Mala, Anastasia
Vallilas, Christos
Boukovinas, Ioannis
author_facet Galiti, Dimitra
Linardou, Helena
Agelaki, Sofia
Karampeazis, Athanasios
Tsoukalas, Nikolaos
Psyrri, Amanda
Karamouzis, Michalis
Syrigos, Konstantinos N.
Ardavanis, Alexandros
Athanasiadis, Ilias
Arvanitou, Eleni
Sgourou, Stavroula
Mala, Anastasia
Vallilas, Christos
Boukovinas, Ioannis
author_sort Galiti, Dimitra
collection PubMed
description Introduction: The increasing burden of cancer, the development of novel therapies, and the COVID-19 pandemic have made cancer care more complex. Digital innovation was then pushed toward developing platforms to facilitate access to cancer care. Age, education, and other disparities were, however, shown to limit the use of the digital health innovation. The aim of this early-stage feasibility study was to assess whether Greek cancer patients would register at CureCancer and self-report their demographics, disease and therapy characteristics, and socioeconomic issues. The study was organized by the Hellenic Society of Medical Oncology. Methods: Patients from nine cancer centers were invited to register on the CureCancer platform and complete an anonymous questionnaire on demographics, disease and therapy characteristics, and socioeconomic issues. Patients were also encouraged to upload, in a secure area for them, their medical files and share them with their physicians. They were then asked to comment on their experience of registration and how easy it was to upload their medical files. Results: Of the 159 patients enrolled, 144 (90.56%) registered, and 114 of those (79.16%) completed the questionnaire, suggesting that the study is feasible. Users’ median age was 54.5 years, and 86.8% of them were university and high school graduates. Most patients (79.8%) reported their specific type of cancer diagnosis, and all reported their therapy characteristics. Breast and lung cancers were the most common. A total of 87 patients (76.3%) reported being on active cancer therapy, 46 (40.4%) had metastatic disease, and 51 (44.7%) received supportive care medications. Eighty-one (71.05%) patients received prior cancer therapies, and twenty-seven recalled prior supportive care medications. All patients reported visiting non-oncology Health Care Professionals during the study. Nineteen of 72 (26.39%) patients who worked prior to cancer diagnosis changed work status; 49 (42.98) patients had children under 24 years; and 16 (14%) patients lived alone. Nine (7.9%) patients were members of patient associations. Registration was “much/very much” easy for 98 (86.0%) patients, while 67 (58.8%) had difficulties uploading their files. Patients commented on the well-organized data access, improved communication, feeling safe, medication adherence, interventions from a distance, and saving time and money. Over 80% of patients “preferred the digital way”. Discussion: A total of 114 patients succeeded in registering on the digital platform and reporting their demographics, disease and therapy characteristics, and socioeconomic issues. Age and educational disparities were disclosed and highlighted the need for educational programs to help older people and people of lower education use digital innovation. Health care policy measures would support patients’ financial burden associated with work changes, living alone, and children under 24 years old at school or college. Policy actions would motivate patients to increase their participation in patient associations. According to the evidence DEFINED framework, the number of patients, and the focus on enrollment, engagement, and user experience, the study fulfills actionability level criterion 1.
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spelling pubmed-104530472023-08-26 Exploring the Use of a Digital Platform for Cancer Patients to Report Their Demographics, Disease and Therapy Characteristics, Age, and Educational Disparities: An Early-Stage Feasibility Study Galiti, Dimitra Linardou, Helena Agelaki, Sofia Karampeazis, Athanasios Tsoukalas, Nikolaos Psyrri, Amanda Karamouzis, Michalis Syrigos, Konstantinos N. Ardavanis, Alexandros Athanasiadis, Ilias Arvanitou, Eleni Sgourou, Stavroula Mala, Anastasia Vallilas, Christos Boukovinas, Ioannis Curr Oncol Article Introduction: The increasing burden of cancer, the development of novel therapies, and the COVID-19 pandemic have made cancer care more complex. Digital innovation was then pushed toward developing platforms to facilitate access to cancer care. Age, education, and other disparities were, however, shown to limit the use of the digital health innovation. The aim of this early-stage feasibility study was to assess whether Greek cancer patients would register at CureCancer and self-report their demographics, disease and therapy characteristics, and socioeconomic issues. The study was organized by the Hellenic Society of Medical Oncology. Methods: Patients from nine cancer centers were invited to register on the CureCancer platform and complete an anonymous questionnaire on demographics, disease and therapy characteristics, and socioeconomic issues. Patients were also encouraged to upload, in a secure area for them, their medical files and share them with their physicians. They were then asked to comment on their experience of registration and how easy it was to upload their medical files. Results: Of the 159 patients enrolled, 144 (90.56%) registered, and 114 of those (79.16%) completed the questionnaire, suggesting that the study is feasible. Users’ median age was 54.5 years, and 86.8% of them were university and high school graduates. Most patients (79.8%) reported their specific type of cancer diagnosis, and all reported their therapy characteristics. Breast and lung cancers were the most common. A total of 87 patients (76.3%) reported being on active cancer therapy, 46 (40.4%) had metastatic disease, and 51 (44.7%) received supportive care medications. Eighty-one (71.05%) patients received prior cancer therapies, and twenty-seven recalled prior supportive care medications. All patients reported visiting non-oncology Health Care Professionals during the study. Nineteen of 72 (26.39%) patients who worked prior to cancer diagnosis changed work status; 49 (42.98) patients had children under 24 years; and 16 (14%) patients lived alone. Nine (7.9%) patients were members of patient associations. Registration was “much/very much” easy for 98 (86.0%) patients, while 67 (58.8%) had difficulties uploading their files. Patients commented on the well-organized data access, improved communication, feeling safe, medication adherence, interventions from a distance, and saving time and money. Over 80% of patients “preferred the digital way”. Discussion: A total of 114 patients succeeded in registering on the digital platform and reporting their demographics, disease and therapy characteristics, and socioeconomic issues. Age and educational disparities were disclosed and highlighted the need for educational programs to help older people and people of lower education use digital innovation. Health care policy measures would support patients’ financial burden associated with work changes, living alone, and children under 24 years old at school or college. Policy actions would motivate patients to increase their participation in patient associations. According to the evidence DEFINED framework, the number of patients, and the focus on enrollment, engagement, and user experience, the study fulfills actionability level criterion 1. MDPI 2023-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10453047/ /pubmed/37623032 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30080551 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Galiti, Dimitra
Linardou, Helena
Agelaki, Sofia
Karampeazis, Athanasios
Tsoukalas, Nikolaos
Psyrri, Amanda
Karamouzis, Michalis
Syrigos, Konstantinos N.
Ardavanis, Alexandros
Athanasiadis, Ilias
Arvanitou, Eleni
Sgourou, Stavroula
Mala, Anastasia
Vallilas, Christos
Boukovinas, Ioannis
Exploring the Use of a Digital Platform for Cancer Patients to Report Their Demographics, Disease and Therapy Characteristics, Age, and Educational Disparities: An Early-Stage Feasibility Study
title Exploring the Use of a Digital Platform for Cancer Patients to Report Their Demographics, Disease and Therapy Characteristics, Age, and Educational Disparities: An Early-Stage Feasibility Study
title_full Exploring the Use of a Digital Platform for Cancer Patients to Report Their Demographics, Disease and Therapy Characteristics, Age, and Educational Disparities: An Early-Stage Feasibility Study
title_fullStr Exploring the Use of a Digital Platform for Cancer Patients to Report Their Demographics, Disease and Therapy Characteristics, Age, and Educational Disparities: An Early-Stage Feasibility Study
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the Use of a Digital Platform for Cancer Patients to Report Their Demographics, Disease and Therapy Characteristics, Age, and Educational Disparities: An Early-Stage Feasibility Study
title_short Exploring the Use of a Digital Platform for Cancer Patients to Report Their Demographics, Disease and Therapy Characteristics, Age, and Educational Disparities: An Early-Stage Feasibility Study
title_sort exploring the use of a digital platform for cancer patients to report their demographics, disease and therapy characteristics, age, and educational disparities: an early-stage feasibility study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10453047/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37623032
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/curroncol30080551
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