JCO Global Oncology (Dec 2021)

Evaluation of the Pediatric Neuro-Oncology Resources Available in Chile

  • Mohammad H. Abu-Arja,
  • Nicolás Rojas del Río,
  • Andres Morales La Madrid,
  • Alvaro Lassaletta,
  • Scott L. Coven,
  • Rosa Moreno,
  • Miguel Valero,
  • Veronica Perez,
  • Felipe Espinoza,
  • Eduardo Fernandez,
  • José Santander,
  • Juan Tordecilla,
  • Veronica Oyarce,
  • Katherine Kopp,
  • Ute Bartels,
  • Ibrahim Qaddoumi,
  • Jonathan L. Finlay,
  • Adrián Cáceres,
  • Mauricio Reyes,
  • Ximena Espinoza,
  • Diana S. Osorio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1200/GO.20.00430
Journal volume & issue
no. 7
pp. 425 – 434

Abstract

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PURPOSEPediatric neuro-oncology resources are mostly unknown in Chile. We report the human and material resources available in Chilean hospitals providing pediatric neuro-oncology services.METHODSA cross-sectional survey was distributed to 17 hospitals providing pediatric neuro-oncology services (Programa Infantil Nacional de Drogas Antineoplásicas [PINDA] hospitals, 11; private, 6).RESULTSResponse rate was 71% (PINDA, 8; private, 4). Pediatric neuro-oncology services were mainly provided within general hospitals (67%). Registries for pediatric CNS tumors and chemotherapy-related toxicities were available in 100% and 67% of hospitals, respectively. CNS tumors were treated by pediatric oncologists in 92% of hospitals; none were formally trained in neuro-oncology. The most used treatment protocols were the national PINDA protocols. All WHO essential medicines for childhood cancer were available in more than 80% of the hospitals except for gemcitabine, oxaliplatin, paclitaxel, and procarbazine. The median number of pediatric neurosurgeons per hospital was two (range, 2-6). General neuroradiologists were available in 83% of the centers. Pathology specimens were sent to neuropathologists (58%), adult pathologists (25%), and pediatric pathologists (17%). Intensity-modulated radiotherapy, conformal radiotherapy, and cobalt radiotherapy were used by 67%, 58%, and 42% of hospitals, respectively. Only one private hospital performed autologous hematopoietic cell transplant for children with CNS tumors.CONCLUSIONA wide range of up-to-date treatment modalities are available for children with CNS tumors. Our survey highlights future directions to improve the pediatric neuro-oncology services available in Chile such as the expansion of multidisciplinary clinics, palliative care services, long-term cancer survivorship programs, dedicated clinical research support teams, establishing standardized mechanism for sending pathologic specimen for second opinion to international specialized centers, and establishing specialized neuro-oncology training program.