Electronic Patient-Reported Outcome–Based Interventions for Palliative Cancer Care: A Systematic and Mapping Review

Author:

Karamanidou Christina1,Natsiavas Pantelis1,Koumakis Lefteris2,Marias Kostas2,Schera Fatima3,Schäfer Michael3,Payne Sheila4,Maramis Christos1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Applied Biosciences, Centre for Research and Technology Hellas, Thessaloniki, Greece

2. Institute of Computer Science, Foundation for Research & Technology Hellas, Heraklion, Greece

3. Fraunhofer Institute for Biomedical Engineering IBMT, St Ingbert, Germany

4. International Observatory on End of Life Care, Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom

Abstract

PURPOSE Capitalizing on the promise of patient-reported outcomes (PROs), electronic implementations of PROs (ePROs) are expected to play an important role in the development of novel digital health interventions targeting palliative cancer care. We performed a systematic and mapping review of the scientific literature on the current ePRO-based approaches used for palliative cancer care. METHODS Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses statement guidelines, the conducted review answered the research questions: “What are the current ePRO-based approaches for palliative cancer care; what is their contribution/value in the domain of palliative cancer care; and what are the potential gaps, challenges, and opportunities for further research?” After a screening step, the corpus of included articles indexed in PubMed or the Web of Science underwent full text review, which mapped the articles across 15 predefined axes. RESULTS The corpus of 24 mapped studies includes 9 study protocols, 7 technical tools/solutions, 7 pilot/feasibility/acceptability studies, and 1 evaluation study. The review of the corpus revealed (1) an archetype of ePRO-enabled interventions for palliative cancer care, which most commonly use ePROs as study end point assessment instruments rather than integral intervention components; (2) the fact that the literature has not fully embraced the modern definitions that expand the scope of palliative care; (3) the striking shortage of promising ubiquitous computing devices (eg, smart activity trackers); and (4) emerging evidence about the benefits of narrowing down the target cancer population, especially when combined with modern patient-centered intervention design methodologies. CONCLUSION Although research on exploiting ePROs for the development of digital palliative cancer care interventions is considerably active and demonstrates several successful cases, there is considerable room for improvement along the directions of the aforementioned findings.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

General Medicine

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