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Strategies to Improve Participation of Older Adults in Cancer Research

Cancer is a disease associated with aging. As the US population ages, the number of older adults with cancer is projected to dramatically increase. Despite this, older adults remain vastly underrepresented in research that sets the standards for cancer treatments and, consequently, clinicians strugg...

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Autores principales: Liu, Jennifer, Gutierrez, Eutiquio, Tiwari, Abhay, Padam, Simran, Li, Daneng, Dale, William, Pal, Sumanta K., Stewart, Daphne, Subbiah, Shanmugga, Bosserman, Linda D., Presant, Cary, Phillips, Tanyanika, Yap, Kelly, Hill, Addie, Bhatt, Geetika, Yeon, Christina, Cianfrocca, Mary, Yuan, Yuan, Mortimer, Joanne, Sedrak, Mina S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7291007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32455877
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm9051571
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author Liu, Jennifer
Gutierrez, Eutiquio
Tiwari, Abhay
Padam, Simran
Li, Daneng
Dale, William
Pal, Sumanta K.
Stewart, Daphne
Subbiah, Shanmugga
Bosserman, Linda D.
Presant, Cary
Phillips, Tanyanika
Yap, Kelly
Hill, Addie
Bhatt, Geetika
Yeon, Christina
Cianfrocca, Mary
Yuan, Yuan
Mortimer, Joanne
Sedrak, Mina S.
author_facet Liu, Jennifer
Gutierrez, Eutiquio
Tiwari, Abhay
Padam, Simran
Li, Daneng
Dale, William
Pal, Sumanta K.
Stewart, Daphne
Subbiah, Shanmugga
Bosserman, Linda D.
Presant, Cary
Phillips, Tanyanika
Yap, Kelly
Hill, Addie
Bhatt, Geetika
Yeon, Christina
Cianfrocca, Mary
Yuan, Yuan
Mortimer, Joanne
Sedrak, Mina S.
author_sort Liu, Jennifer
collection PubMed
description Cancer is a disease associated with aging. As the US population ages, the number of older adults with cancer is projected to dramatically increase. Despite this, older adults remain vastly underrepresented in research that sets the standards for cancer treatments and, consequently, clinicians struggle with how to interpret data from clinical trials and apply them to older adults in practice. A combination of system, clinician, and patient barriers bar opportunities for trial participation for many older patients, and strategies are needed to address these barriers at multiple fronts, five of which are offered here. This review highlights the need to (1) broaden eligibility criteria, (2) measure relevant end points, (3) expand standard trial designs, (4) increase resources (e.g., institutional support, interdisciplinary care, and telehealth), and (5) develop targeted interventions (e.g., behavioral interventions to promote patient enrollment). Implementing these solutions requires a substantial investment in engaging and collaborating with community-based practices, where the majority of older patients with cancer receive their care. Multifaceted strategies are needed to ensure that older patients with cancer, across diverse healthcare settings, receive the highest-quality, evidence-based care.
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spelling pubmed-72910072020-06-17 Strategies to Improve Participation of Older Adults in Cancer Research Liu, Jennifer Gutierrez, Eutiquio Tiwari, Abhay Padam, Simran Li, Daneng Dale, William Pal, Sumanta K. Stewart, Daphne Subbiah, Shanmugga Bosserman, Linda D. Presant, Cary Phillips, Tanyanika Yap, Kelly Hill, Addie Bhatt, Geetika Yeon, Christina Cianfrocca, Mary Yuan, Yuan Mortimer, Joanne Sedrak, Mina S. J Clin Med Review Cancer is a disease associated with aging. As the US population ages, the number of older adults with cancer is projected to dramatically increase. Despite this, older adults remain vastly underrepresented in research that sets the standards for cancer treatments and, consequently, clinicians struggle with how to interpret data from clinical trials and apply them to older adults in practice. A combination of system, clinician, and patient barriers bar opportunities for trial participation for many older patients, and strategies are needed to address these barriers at multiple fronts, five of which are offered here. This review highlights the need to (1) broaden eligibility criteria, (2) measure relevant end points, (3) expand standard trial designs, (4) increase resources (e.g., institutional support, interdisciplinary care, and telehealth), and (5) develop targeted interventions (e.g., behavioral interventions to promote patient enrollment). Implementing these solutions requires a substantial investment in engaging and collaborating with community-based practices, where the majority of older patients with cancer receive their care. Multifaceted strategies are needed to ensure that older patients with cancer, across diverse healthcare settings, receive the highest-quality, evidence-based care. MDPI 2020-05-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7291007/ /pubmed/32455877 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm9051571 Text en © 2020 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/).
spellingShingle Review
Liu, Jennifer
Gutierrez, Eutiquio
Tiwari, Abhay
Padam, Simran
Li, Daneng
Dale, William
Pal, Sumanta K.
Stewart, Daphne
Subbiah, Shanmugga
Bosserman, Linda D.
Presant, Cary
Phillips, Tanyanika
Yap, Kelly
Hill, Addie
Bhatt, Geetika
Yeon, Christina
Cianfrocca, Mary
Yuan, Yuan
Mortimer, Joanne
Sedrak, Mina S.
Strategies to Improve Participation of Older Adults in Cancer Research
title Strategies to Improve Participation of Older Adults in Cancer Research
title_full Strategies to Improve Participation of Older Adults in Cancer Research
title_fullStr Strategies to Improve Participation of Older Adults in Cancer Research
title_full_unstemmed Strategies to Improve Participation of Older Adults in Cancer Research
title_short Strategies to Improve Participation of Older Adults in Cancer Research
title_sort strategies to improve participation of older adults in cancer research
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7291007/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32455877
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm9051571
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