Advances in Radiation Oncology (May 2023)

Remote Global Radiation Oncology Education and Training: A Pathway to Increase Access to High-Quality Radiation Therapy Services in Low- and Middle-Income Countries

  • Awusi Kavuma, DPhil,
  • Solomon Kibudde, MMed (Rad),
  • Matthew Schmidt, MSc,
  • Tianyu Zhao, DPhil,
  • Hiram Gay, MD,
  • Benjamin Li, MD,
  • Jeff Michalski, MD,
  • Geoffrey Hugo, MD,
  • Enkhtsetseg Vanchinbazar, MSc,
  • Minjmaa Minjgee, MD,
  • Erdenekhuu Nansalmaa, MD,
  • Fred Ssewamala, DPhil,
  • Angel Velarde, DPhil,
  • Vicky De Fella, MD,
  • Milton Ixquiac, DPhil,
  • Lauren Henke, MD,
  • Jacaranda van Rheenen, DPhil,
  • Baozhou Sun, DPhil

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. 101180

Abstract

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Purpose: There is a vital need to train radiation therapy professionals in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) to develop sustainable cancer treatment capacity and infrastructure. LMICs have started to introduce intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), which is the standard of care in high-income countries, because of improved outcomes and reduced toxicities. This work reports the efficacy of a complementary asynchronous plus synchronous virtual-training approach on improving radiation therapy professions’ self-confidence levels and evaluating participants’ attitudes toward asynchronous and synchronous didactic hands-on learning in 3 LMICs. Methods and Materials: Training was provided to 37 participants from Uganda, Guatemala, and Mongolia, which included 4 theoretical lectures, 4 hands-on sessions, and 8 self-guided online videos. The 36-day training focused on IMRT contouring, site-specific target/organ definition, planning/optimization, and quality assurance. Participants completed pre- and postsession confidence surveys on a 0 to 10 scale, which was converted to a 5-point Likert rating scale to evaluate the training outcomes. The pros and cons of the 3 different training formats were compared. Results: The participants included 15 (40.5%) radiation oncologists, 11 (29.7%) medical physicists, 6 (16.2%) radiation therapists, and 5 (13.5%) dosimetrists. Approximately 50% had more than 10 years of radiation therapy experience, 70.8% had no formal IMRT training, and only 25% had IMRT at their institutions. The average experience and confidence levels in using IMRT at baseline were 3.2 and 2.9, which increased to 5.2 and 4.9 (P < .001) after the theoretical training. After the hands-on training, the experience and confidence levels further improved to 5.4 and 5.5 (P < .001). After the self-guided training, the confidence levels increased further to 6.9 (P < .01). Among the 3 different training sessions, hands-on trainings (58.3%) were most helpful for the development of participants’ IMRT skills, followed by theoretical sessions with 25%. Conclusions: After completing the training sessions, Uganda and Mongolia started IMRT treatments. Remote training provides an excellent and feasible e-learning platform to train radiation therapy professionals in LMICs. The training program improved the IMRT confidence levels and treatment delivery. The hands-on trainings were most preferred.