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Expert survey on management of prostate cancer in India: Real-world insights into practice patterns

Authors :
Ganesh, Bakshi
Hemant, Tongaonkar
Sanjai, Addla
Santosh, Menon
Aditya, Pradhan
Abhay, Kumar
Abhijit, Bapat
Adwaita, Gore
Amit, Joshi
Anand, Raja
Anil, Bradoo
Anita, Ramesh
Anup, Kumar
Archi, Agrawal
Asawari, Ambekar
Ashish, Joshi
Ashish, Singh
Bhupendra Pal, Singh
Deepak, Dabkara
Dhiraj, Khadakban
Gagan, Gautam
Gagan, Prakash
Harvinder Singh, Pahwa
Hemant Kumar, Goel
Jagdeesh, Kulkarni
Jeeban Jyoti, Mishra
Kaushal, Patel
Mahendra, Pal
Percy Jal, Chibber
Priya, Tiwari
Radheshyam, Naik
S K, Raghunath
Rahul, Krishnatry
Rajendra, Shimpi
Rakesh, Sharma
Rakesh, Taran
Sameer, Trivedi
Sanjay, Nabar
Sanjoy, Surekha
Satish, Kumar
Satyakam Krishna, Sawaimoon
Shailesh, Raina
Srivatsa, Narasimha
Suresh, Advani
Syed Mohammed, Ghouse
Vamshi Krishna, Muddu
Vashishth, Maniar
Vivek, Venkat
Vedang, Murthy
Source :
Indian Journal of Cancer. 59:19
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Medknow, 2022.

Abstract

To gain insights on the diverse practice patterns and treatment pathways for prostate cancer (PC) in India, the Urological Cancer Foundation convened the first Indian survey to discuss all aspects of PC, with the objective of guiding clinicians on optimizing management in PC. A modified Delphi method was used, wherein a multidisciplinary panel of oncologists treating PC across India developed a questionnaire related to screening, diagnosis and management of early, locally advanced and metastatic PC and participated in a web-based survey (WBS) (n = 62). An expert committee meeting (CM) (n = 48, subset from WBS) reviewed the ambiguous questions for better comprehension and reanalyzed the evidence to establish a revote for specific questions. The threshold for strong agreement and agreement was ≥90% and ≥75% agreement, respectively. Sixty-two questions were answered in the WBS; in the CM 31 questions were revoted and 4 questions were added. The panelists selected answers based on their best opinion and closest to their practice strategy, not considering financial constraints and access challenges. Of the 66 questions, strong agreement was reached for 17 questions and agreement was achieved for 22 questions. There were heterogeneous responses for 27 questions indicative of variegated management approaches. This is one of the first Indian survey, documenting the diverse clinical practice patterns in the management of PC in India. It aims to provide guidance in the face of technological advances, resource constraints and sparse high-level evidence.

Details

ISSN :
0019509X
Volume :
59
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Indian Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....14b9e9660db8a7e9f53e81c0fd512a68
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijc.ijc_1145_21