Current Oncology (Jul 2022)

Do Sustainable Palliative Single Fraction Radiotherapy Practices Proliferate or Perish 2 Years after a Knowledge Translation Campaign?

  • Shaheer Shahhat,
  • Nikesh Hanumanthappa,
  • Youn Tae Chung,
  • James Beck,
  • Rashmi Koul,
  • Bashir Bashir,
  • Andrew Cooke,
  • Arbind Dubey,
  • Jim Butler,
  • Maged Nashed,
  • William Hunter,
  • Aldrich D. Ong,
  • Shrinivas Rathod,
  • Kim Tran,
  • Julian O. Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29070404
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 7
pp. 5097 – 5109

Abstract

Read online

In early 2017, the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer and CancerCare Manitoba undertook a comprehensive knowledge translation (KT) campaign to improve the utilization of single fraction radiotherapy (SFRT) over multiple fraction radiotherapy (MFRT) for palliative management of bone metastases. The campaign significantly increased short-term SFRT utilization. We assess the time-dependent effects of KT-derived SFRT utilization 12–24 months removed from the KT campaign in a Provincial Cancer Program. This study identified patients receiving palliative radiotherapy for bone metastases in Manitoba in the 2018 calendar year using the provincial radiotherapy database. The proportion of patients treated with SFRT in 2018 was compared to 2017. Logistic regression analyses identified risk factors associated with MFRT receipt. In 2018, 1008 patients received palliative radiotherapy for bone metastasis, of which 63.3% received SFRT, a small overall increase in SFRT use over 2017 (59.1%). However, 41.1% of ROs demonstrated year-over-year decreases in SFRT utilization, indicative of a time-dependent loss of SFRT prescription habits derived from KT. Although SFRT use increased slightly overall in 2018, evidence of compliance fatigue was observed, suggestive of a time-perishing property of RO prescription behaviours derived from KT methodologies. Verification of the study’s findings in larger cohorts would be beneficial. These findings highlight the need for additional longitudinal KT reinforcement practices in the years following KT campaigns.

Keywords