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Originally published as JCO Early Release 10.1200/JCO.2007.12.2325 on July 23 2007

Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol 25, No 25 (September 1), 2007: pp. 3800-3801
© 2007 American Society of Clinical Oncology.

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EDITORIAL

Cancer Survivorship Research and Guidelines: Maybe the Cart Should Be Beside the Horse

Craig C. Earle

Division of Population Sciences, Department of Medical Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

In its recent report, From Cancer Patient to Cancer Survivor: Lost in Transition,1 the Institute of Medicine had as its third recommendation that "Health care providers should use systematically developed evidence-based clinical practice guidelines, assessment tools, and screening instruments to help identify and manage late effects of cancer and its treatment. Existing guidelines should be refined and new evidence-based guidelines should be developed."

In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology, Carver et al,2 writing for the ASCO Cancer Survivorship Expert Panel, present an evidence review of cardiac and pulmonary late effects. It did not start out as an evidence review, though. It was intended to be an evidence-based clinical practice guideline, the first of several for survivorship care. The panel chose two of the most common, well-known, and well-studied long-term and late effects for which survivors of cancer are at risk. Yet, after a rigorous evaluation of the evidence, it was concluded that it was not sufficient to support an evidence-based guideline. As a potential user of such a guideline, this is very disappointing. If there is insufficient evidence on which to base management of these relatively common problems, it is clear that the creation of comprehensive evidence-based guidelines for the care of adult cancer survivors is not currently feasible.

Why is evidence about what to do for cancer survivors so hard to obtain? One reason is that cancer survivors are a very heterogeneous population. Their risk for recurrence or late effects usually depends on the specific site, stage, and histology of their disease, the treatments they received, when those treatments were delivered (since regimens and techniques change over time), the length of time that has elapsed since those exposures, and underlying risk factors independent of their cancer or its treatment. Moreover, cancer is largely a disease of the elderly, so determining late effects from unrelated comorbid conditions can be difficult. Consequently, creation of a truly homogeneous population often leaves an investigator with relatively few patients to study.

Another reason research in survivorship is difficult is that many of the end points of interest occur infrequently. Although the cumulative burden of long-term and late effects of treatment is significant among cancer survivors, therapies are generally developed so that any particular severe late effect is a relatively uncommon occurrence. As a result, surveillance strategies or other interventions have to be applied to many patients over a long period of time in order to have the power to detect a difference in important outcomes among approaches.

Furthermore, even if a homogeneous population of survivors with a relevant exposure can be identified in sufficient numbers, the interpretations of current privacy laws by some institutional review boards make it difficult to contact survivors outside of their usually infrequent clinic visits. Such restrictions make assembly of a representative population-based cohort very difficult, and importantly, deprive survivors of the opportunity to participate in cancer research.

Lastly, the fact that there is currently little guidance available on how to care for survivors is itself a challenge to research. For example, we do not routinely screen asymptomatic people in the general population for subclinical cardiac dysfunction, so there is not a clear model for what oncologists should do with someone who has had significant anthracycline exposure and chest irradiation. In such situations, each physician uses his/her judgment to do what s/he thinks is best for his/her patients. This usually leads to large practice variation, however. High quality evidence is generally only obtained when the outcomes of uniform practices applied to a large number of subjects can be observed. In both observational studies and even prospectively designed trials, disparate interventions make data synthesis and meta-analysis difficult to perform and interpret.

Consensus guidelines from a respected source can accelerate the evolution of knowledge by standardizing care. When practice is more uniform, it then becomes more feasible to study the effects of care, thereby gaining the evidence needed to alter the guidelines in an iterative way until sufficient data have accumulated with which to create evidence-based guidelines. If done thoughtfully and judiciously with attention to economic and manpower implications, a consensus recommendation can at least raise awareness of an issue among some providers, while at the same time may decrease overutilization of interventions by others. They are also much appreciated by practicing physicians eager to have clear standards within which to function.

There are successful examples of consensus guidelines that are informed by evidence as opposed to being strictly evidence based. Such efforts incorporate literature review with the clinical experience of experts and multisite and multidisciplinary guideline review and revision. Since 1995, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network has developed more than 100 guidelines estimated to cover 95% of the clinical situations with which cancer patients present.3 This organization considered creating survivorship guidelines but decided that the scope would be too great and so instead incorporated limited recommendations for surveillance and management of common issues facing survivors into their treatment guidelines. The Children's Oncology Group created comprehensive guidelines for management of late and long-term effects via a consensus process among a panel of experts.4 While designed for children, many of the recommendations can be adapted as a starting point for adults.

The final recommendation of the Institute of Medicine report was that funding agencies "should increase their support of survivorship research and expand mechanisms for its conduct." The experience of the ASCO Cancer Survivorship Expert Panel shows this to clearly be needed. In the meantime, consensus-based guidance on how to care for cancer survivors may be better than no guidance at all.

AUTHOR'S DISCLOSURES OF POTENTIAL CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

The author(s) indicated no potential conflicts of interest.

NOTES

published online ahead of print at www.jco.org on July 23, 2007.

REFERENCES

1. Institute of Medicine: From cancer patient to cancer survivor: Lost in transition. Washington, DC, National Academies Press, 2005

2. Carver JR, Shapiro CL, Ng A, et al: American Society of Clinical Oncology clinical evidence review on the ongoing care of adult cancer survivors: Cardiac and pulmonary late effects. J Clin Oncol 25:3991-4008, 2007[Abstract/Free Full Text]

3. National Comprehensive Cancer Network: Welcome to the NCCN clinical practice guidelines in oncology. http://www.nccn.org/professionals/physician_gls/default.asp

4. Children's Oncology Group: Cure search: Long-term follow-up guidelines for survivors of childhood, adolescent, and young adult cancers. www.survivorshipguidelines.org


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Copyright © 2007 by the American Society of Clinical Oncology, Online ISSN: 1527-7755. Print ISSN: 0732-183X
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