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COVID‐19 outbreak: An experience to reappraise the role of hospital at home in the anti‐cancer drug injection

BACKGROUND: The COVID‐19 outbreak has posed considerable challenges to the health care system worldwide, especially for cancer treatment. We described the activity and the care organisation of the Hospitalisation At Home (HAH) structure during the pandemic for treating patients with anti‐cancer inje...

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Autores principales: Mittaine‐Marzac, Bénédicte, Zogo, Arsene, Crusson, Jean‐Christophe, Cheneau, Valerie, Pinel, Marie‐Claire, Brandely‐Piat, Marie‐Laure, Amrani, Fatma, Havard, Laurent, Balladur, Elisabeth, Louissaint, Taina, Nivet, Laurence, Ankri, Joel, Aegerter, Philippe, De Stampa, Matthieu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7982610/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33665971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.3682
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author Mittaine‐Marzac, Bénédicte
Zogo, Arsene
Crusson, Jean‐Christophe
Cheneau, Valerie
Pinel, Marie‐Claire
Brandely‐Piat, Marie‐Laure
Amrani, Fatma
Havard, Laurent
Balladur, Elisabeth
Louissaint, Taina
Nivet, Laurence
Ankri, Joel
Aegerter, Philippe
De Stampa, Matthieu
author_facet Mittaine‐Marzac, Bénédicte
Zogo, Arsene
Crusson, Jean‐Christophe
Cheneau, Valerie
Pinel, Marie‐Claire
Brandely‐Piat, Marie‐Laure
Amrani, Fatma
Havard, Laurent
Balladur, Elisabeth
Louissaint, Taina
Nivet, Laurence
Ankri, Joel
Aegerter, Philippe
De Stampa, Matthieu
author_sort Mittaine‐Marzac, Bénédicte
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The COVID‐19 outbreak has posed considerable challenges to the health care system worldwide, especially for cancer treatment. We described the activity and the care organisation of the Hospitalisation At Home (HAH) structure during the pandemic for treating patients with anti‐cancer injections. METHODS: We report the established organisation, the eligibility criteria, the patient characteristics, the treatment schemes and the stakeholders’ role during two 5‐week periods in 2020, before and during the French population's lockdown. RESULTS: The increase of activity during the lockdown (+32% of treated patients, +156% of new patients and +28% of delivered preparations) concerned solid tumour, mainly breast cancer, even if haematological malignancies remained the most frequent. Thirty different drugs were delivered, including three new drugs administered in HAH versus 19 during the routine period (p < 0.01). For those clinical departments accustomed to using HAH, the usual organisation was kept, but with adjustments. Five clinical departments increased the number of patients treated at home and widened the panel of drugs prescribed. Three oncology departments and one radiotherapy department for the first time solicited HAH for anti‐cancer injections, mainly for immunotherapy. We adjusted the HAH organisation with additional human resources and allowed to prescribe drugs with an infusion time of <30 min only for the new prescribers. CONCLUSION: HAH allowed for the continuation of anti‐cancer injections without postponement during the pandemic, and for a decrease in unnecessary patient travel to hospital with its concomitant COVID‐19 transmission risk. Often left out of guidelines, the place of HAH in treating cancer patients should be reappraised, even more so during a pandemic.
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spelling pubmed-79826102021-03-25 COVID‐19 outbreak: An experience to reappraise the role of hospital at home in the anti‐cancer drug injection Mittaine‐Marzac, Bénédicte Zogo, Arsene Crusson, Jean‐Christophe Cheneau, Valerie Pinel, Marie‐Claire Brandely‐Piat, Marie‐Laure Amrani, Fatma Havard, Laurent Balladur, Elisabeth Louissaint, Taina Nivet, Laurence Ankri, Joel Aegerter, Philippe De Stampa, Matthieu Cancer Med Clinical Cancer Research BACKGROUND: The COVID‐19 outbreak has posed considerable challenges to the health care system worldwide, especially for cancer treatment. We described the activity and the care organisation of the Hospitalisation At Home (HAH) structure during the pandemic for treating patients with anti‐cancer injections. METHODS: We report the established organisation, the eligibility criteria, the patient characteristics, the treatment schemes and the stakeholders’ role during two 5‐week periods in 2020, before and during the French population's lockdown. RESULTS: The increase of activity during the lockdown (+32% of treated patients, +156% of new patients and +28% of delivered preparations) concerned solid tumour, mainly breast cancer, even if haematological malignancies remained the most frequent. Thirty different drugs were delivered, including three new drugs administered in HAH versus 19 during the routine period (p < 0.01). For those clinical departments accustomed to using HAH, the usual organisation was kept, but with adjustments. Five clinical departments increased the number of patients treated at home and widened the panel of drugs prescribed. Three oncology departments and one radiotherapy department for the first time solicited HAH for anti‐cancer injections, mainly for immunotherapy. We adjusted the HAH organisation with additional human resources and allowed to prescribe drugs with an infusion time of <30 min only for the new prescribers. CONCLUSION: HAH allowed for the continuation of anti‐cancer injections without postponement during the pandemic, and for a decrease in unnecessary patient travel to hospital with its concomitant COVID‐19 transmission risk. Often left out of guidelines, the place of HAH in treating cancer patients should be reappraised, even more so during a pandemic. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-03-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7982610/ /pubmed/33665971 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.3682 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Clinical Cancer Research
Mittaine‐Marzac, Bénédicte
Zogo, Arsene
Crusson, Jean‐Christophe
Cheneau, Valerie
Pinel, Marie‐Claire
Brandely‐Piat, Marie‐Laure
Amrani, Fatma
Havard, Laurent
Balladur, Elisabeth
Louissaint, Taina
Nivet, Laurence
Ankri, Joel
Aegerter, Philippe
De Stampa, Matthieu
COVID‐19 outbreak: An experience to reappraise the role of hospital at home in the anti‐cancer drug injection
title COVID‐19 outbreak: An experience to reappraise the role of hospital at home in the anti‐cancer drug injection
title_full COVID‐19 outbreak: An experience to reappraise the role of hospital at home in the anti‐cancer drug injection
title_fullStr COVID‐19 outbreak: An experience to reappraise the role of hospital at home in the anti‐cancer drug injection
title_full_unstemmed COVID‐19 outbreak: An experience to reappraise the role of hospital at home in the anti‐cancer drug injection
title_short COVID‐19 outbreak: An experience to reappraise the role of hospital at home in the anti‐cancer drug injection
title_sort covid‐19 outbreak: an experience to reappraise the role of hospital at home in the anti‐cancer drug injection
topic Clinical Cancer Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7982610/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33665971
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.3682
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