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FARGO-360: a multi-disciplinary survey of practice and perspectives on provision of care for patients with frailty presenting with gynecological cancers in the UK and Ireland

Authors :
Yee-Loi Louise Wan
Gemma Cass
Anna Collins
Meera Adishesh
Susan Addley
Holly Baker-Rand
Rasiah Bharathan
Dominic Blake
James Beirne
Lisa Canavan
James Dilley
Gary Fitzgibbon
Kate Glennon
Narthana Ilenkovan
Eleanor Jones
Tabassum Khan
Thumuluru Kavitha Madhuri
Victoria McQueen
Alison Montgomery
Rachel Louise O'Donnell
Sven Watmore
Philip White
Gemma Louise Owens
Source :
Audit and Research in Gynaecological Oncology (ARGO) Collaborative 2022, ' FARGO-360 : a multi-disciplinary survey of practice and perspectives on provision of care for patients with frailty presenting with gynecological cancers in the UK and Ireland ', International journal of gynecological cancer : official journal of the International Gynecological Cancer Society, vol. 32, no. 7, pp. 924-930 . https://doi.org/10.1136/ijgc-2022-003396
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

ObjectivesFrailty has been associated with worse cancer-related outcomes for people with gynecological cancers. However, the lack of clear guidance on how to assess and modify frailty prior to instigating active treatments has the potential to lead to large variations in practice and outcomes. This study aimed to evaluate current practice and perspectives of healthcare practitioners on the provision of care for patients with frailty and a gynecological cancer.MethodsData were collected via a questionnaire-based survey distributed by the Audit and Research in Gynecological Oncology (ARGO) collaborative to healthcare professionals who identified as working with patients with gynecological malignancies in the United Kingdom (UK) or Ireland. Study data were collected using REDCap software hosted at the University of Manchester. Responses were collected over a 16 week period between January and April 2021.ResultsA total of 206 healthcare professionals (30 anesthetists (14.6%), 30 pre-operative nurses (14.6%), 51 surgeons (24.8%), 34 cancer specialist nurses (16.5%), 21 medical/clinical oncologists (10.2%), 25 physiotherapists/occupational therapists (12.1%) and 15 dieticians (7.3%)) completed the survey. The respondents worked at 19 hospital trusts across the UK and Ireland. Frailty scoring was not routinely performed in 63% of care settings, yet the majority of practitioners reported modifying their practice when providing and deciding on care for patients with frailty. Only 16% of organizations surveyed had a dedicated pathway for assessment and management of patients with frailty. A total of 37% of respondents reported access to prehabilitation services, 79% to enhanced recovery, and 27% to community rehabilitation teams.ConclusionPractitioners from all groups surveyed considered that appropriate training, dedicated pathways for optimization, frailty specific performance indicators and evidence that frailty scoring had an impact on clinical outcomes and patient experience could all help to improve care for frail patients.

Details

ISSN :
15251438
Volume :
32
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International journal of gynecological cancer : official journal of the International Gynecological Cancer Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....236fb9fdb14837342e236c75ae4699bf