Supportive Care Needs of Newly Diagnosed Cancer Patients in a Comprehensive Cancer Center: Identifying Care Profiles and Future Perspectives

Author:

Papageorgiou Loula1,Le Provost Jean-Bernard2,Di Palma Mario1,Langlois Marc3,Salma Israa14,Lopes Manuella1,Minvielle Etienne14,Abbas Maya1,Scotté Florian1

Affiliation:

1. Patient Pathway Division, Gustave Roussy, 94805 Villejuif, France

2. Psycho-Oncology Unit, Gustave Roussy, 94805 Villejuif, France

3. Doo Conseil, 33000 Bordeaux, France

4. i3-CRG, École Polytechnique, CNRS, Institut Polytechnique de Paris, 91762 Palaiseau, France

Abstract

The prompt introduction of supportive care for patients with cancer leads to a better quality of life, potential survival benefits, and improvements in treatment safety. Considering that patients’ needs vary, descriptive assessments could serve as a compass for an efficient and prompt healthcare response. The aim of this study was to identify supportive care needs in newly diagnosed patients according to cancer type. A retrospective study was conducted by collecting data from the case consultation and medical records of a comprehensive cancer center in France. Patients’ needs were divided into twelve domains: nutrition, psychological support, psychiatric support, social care, physiotherapy, addictology, pain management, palliative care, pharmacology, complementary and alternative practice (CAM), sexual health, and speech therapy. Out of 6217 newly diagnosed patients of various cancer types who sought medical care at Gustave Roussy in 2021, 2541 (41%) required supportive cancer care (SCC), and of them, 1331 patients (52%) required two or more different SCC specialist interventions. The top five interventions were dietary (for 60% of patients), physiotherapy (33%), psychology (29%), social care (28%), and pain management (16%). Subgroup analysis according to cancer department highlighted additional specific needs: CAM for breast cancer patients (11%), speech specialist (27%) and addictologist (22%) interventions for ENT patients, psychiatry consultations for neurological patients (16%), and palliative care for dermatology patients (23%). The aforementioned data suggest that an early, multidisciplinary supportive care intervention should be required. Assembling human resources at the time of diagnosis within a dedicated day unit would be the next appropriate step in developing personalized care pathways related to the highlighted needs.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference30 articles.

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2. Association des Soins Oncologiques de Support (2023, November 17). Que Sont Les Soins de Support?. Available online: https://www.afsos.org/les-soins-de-support/mieux-vivre-cancer.

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