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Targeting Education as a Barrier to Implement Hypofractionation: Results of a Country-Wide Training Program

INTRODUCTION: Access to radiation therapy in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) could be improved with modern hypofractionated radiation therapy schedules, although their adoption remains limited. We aimed to evaluate perceptions regarding hypofractionation and the effect of a dedicated curric...

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Autores principales: Caicedo-Martínez, María, Li, Benjamin, González-Motta, Alejandro, Carlson, Caroline, Zhu, Hong, Bobadilla, Iván, Martínez, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9905934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36760343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.adro.2022.101165
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author Caicedo-Martínez, María
Li, Benjamin
González-Motta, Alejandro
Carlson, Caroline
Zhu, Hong
Bobadilla, Iván
Martínez, David
author_facet Caicedo-Martínez, María
Li, Benjamin
González-Motta, Alejandro
Carlson, Caroline
Zhu, Hong
Bobadilla, Iván
Martínez, David
author_sort Caicedo-Martínez, María
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Access to radiation therapy in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) could be improved with modern hypofractionated radiation therapy schedules, although their adoption remains limited. We aimed to evaluate perceptions regarding hypofractionation and the effect of a dedicated curriculum in an LMIC. METHODS AND MATERIALS: We developed a pilot e-learning hypofractionation curriculum focused on breast, prostate, rectal cancer, and high-grade glioma in Colombia. International educators taught 13 weekly, 90-minute sessions. Participants completed pre- and postcurriculum questionnaires regarding hypofractionation attitudes, 1 to 5 Likert-scale self-confidence, and practices for 12 clinical scenarios. Physicians’ responses were categorically scored “1” (for hypofractionation or ultrahypofractionation) or “0” (for conventional fractionation). We used the paired t test to measure pre- versus postcurriculum differences in self-confidence and the McNemar test to detect differences in hypofractionation selection. RESULTS: Across 19 cities in Colombia, 147 clinicians enrolled: 61 radiation oncologists, 6 radiation oncology residents, 59 medical physicists, 18 physics residents, and 3 other staff. Among physicians, education was the greatest barrier to select hypofractionation, common in ultrahypofractionation for prostate (77.6%) and breast cancer (74.6%) and less common for moderate hypofractionation of prostate (61.2%) and breast cancer (52.2%). Additional perceived barriers included unfamiliarity with clinic protocols (7%-22%), clinical experience (5%-15%), personal preference (3%-16%), and lack of technology (3%-20%), with variation across different clinical settings. After the curriculum, paired (n = 38) physicians’ selection of hypofractionation increased across all disease sites (mean aggregate score 6.2/12 vs 8.2/12, P <.001). Self-confidence among paired clinicians (n = 87) increased for prostate ultrahypofractionation (+0.45), rectal ultrahypofractionation (+0.43), breast hypofractionation (+0.38), and prostate hypofractionation (+0.23) (P ≤ .03). CONCLUSIONS: In an LMIC with a bundled payment system, lack of education and training was a perceived barrier for implementation of hypofractionation and ultrahypofractionation. A targeted e-learning hypofractionation curriculum increased participant confidence and selection of hypofractionated schedules.
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spelling pubmed-99059342023-02-08 Targeting Education as a Barrier to Implement Hypofractionation: Results of a Country-Wide Training Program Caicedo-Martínez, María Li, Benjamin González-Motta, Alejandro Carlson, Caroline Zhu, Hong Bobadilla, Iván Martínez, David Adv Radiat Oncol Scientific Article INTRODUCTION: Access to radiation therapy in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) could be improved with modern hypofractionated radiation therapy schedules, although their adoption remains limited. We aimed to evaluate perceptions regarding hypofractionation and the effect of a dedicated curriculum in an LMIC. METHODS AND MATERIALS: We developed a pilot e-learning hypofractionation curriculum focused on breast, prostate, rectal cancer, and high-grade glioma in Colombia. International educators taught 13 weekly, 90-minute sessions. Participants completed pre- and postcurriculum questionnaires regarding hypofractionation attitudes, 1 to 5 Likert-scale self-confidence, and practices for 12 clinical scenarios. Physicians’ responses were categorically scored “1” (for hypofractionation or ultrahypofractionation) or “0” (for conventional fractionation). We used the paired t test to measure pre- versus postcurriculum differences in self-confidence and the McNemar test to detect differences in hypofractionation selection. RESULTS: Across 19 cities in Colombia, 147 clinicians enrolled: 61 radiation oncologists, 6 radiation oncology residents, 59 medical physicists, 18 physics residents, and 3 other staff. Among physicians, education was the greatest barrier to select hypofractionation, common in ultrahypofractionation for prostate (77.6%) and breast cancer (74.6%) and less common for moderate hypofractionation of prostate (61.2%) and breast cancer (52.2%). Additional perceived barriers included unfamiliarity with clinic protocols (7%-22%), clinical experience (5%-15%), personal preference (3%-16%), and lack of technology (3%-20%), with variation across different clinical settings. After the curriculum, paired (n = 38) physicians’ selection of hypofractionation increased across all disease sites (mean aggregate score 6.2/12 vs 8.2/12, P <.001). Self-confidence among paired clinicians (n = 87) increased for prostate ultrahypofractionation (+0.45), rectal ultrahypofractionation (+0.43), breast hypofractionation (+0.38), and prostate hypofractionation (+0.23) (P ≤ .03). CONCLUSIONS: In an LMIC with a bundled payment system, lack of education and training was a perceived barrier for implementation of hypofractionation and ultrahypofractionation. A targeted e-learning hypofractionation curriculum increased participant confidence and selection of hypofractionated schedules. Elsevier 2022-12-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9905934/ /pubmed/36760343 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.adro.2022.101165 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Scientific Article
Caicedo-Martínez, María
Li, Benjamin
González-Motta, Alejandro
Carlson, Caroline
Zhu, Hong
Bobadilla, Iván
Martínez, David
Targeting Education as a Barrier to Implement Hypofractionation: Results of a Country-Wide Training Program
title Targeting Education as a Barrier to Implement Hypofractionation: Results of a Country-Wide Training Program
title_full Targeting Education as a Barrier to Implement Hypofractionation: Results of a Country-Wide Training Program
title_fullStr Targeting Education as a Barrier to Implement Hypofractionation: Results of a Country-Wide Training Program
title_full_unstemmed Targeting Education as a Barrier to Implement Hypofractionation: Results of a Country-Wide Training Program
title_short Targeting Education as a Barrier to Implement Hypofractionation: Results of a Country-Wide Training Program
title_sort targeting education as a barrier to implement hypofractionation: results of a country-wide training program
topic Scientific Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9905934/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36760343
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.adro.2022.101165
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