ian olver, cancer council australia: best practice and improving services

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Best-practice & improving services Ian Olver CEO Cancer Council Australia

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Professor Ian Olver AM, CEO, Cancer Council Australia delivered this presentation at the 2013 Cancer Centres Symposium in Australia. The annual event explores current opportunities and challenges surrounding cancer centre policy, funding, operations, innovations and development. For more information about the annual event, please visit the conference website: http://www.informa.com.au/cancercentressymposium

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Page 1: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Best-practice & improving servicesIan Olver CEO Cancer Council Australia

Page 2: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Cancer Statistics

•  Estimated incidence (2012) is 120,700 "

•  Prostate, Bowel, Breast, melanoma and Lung"

•  56% male"

•  Deaths from cancer 42,800 in 2010 (1/3 Aust deaths)"

Page 3: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Age standardised mortality decreased by 17% from 210/100,000 to 174/100,000 in 2010"

5 year survival has increased from 47% in 1982-87 to 66% in 2006-2010"

Page 4: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Prevalence of cancer

Page 5: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services
Page 6: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

What is Personalised Medicine?"

•  Personalized medicine is the customization of healthcare, the tailoring of treatment to the individual patient by use of genetic or other information"

•  Cancer is based on mutations in genes. There is individual variability in these changes which could mean individual treatments"

Page 7: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services
Page 8: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

May 2001

Page 9: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Glivec"

•  It blocks proteins from overexpressed defective genes found in some cancers"

•  Effective in chronic myeloid leukaemia"•  Effective in GIST Gastrointestinal stromal

tumours which over express c-kit"•  Side effects"

•  Nausea, muscle pains, fluid retention, diarrhoea, blood count suppression, LFT’s early “storm”"

Page 10: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services
Page 11: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Pre- and Post-STI571

Page 12: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

0 1 2 3 4 5 50

60

70

80

90

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 50

60

70

80

90

100

Disease-Free Survival B-31 N9831

ACTH 864 83 ACT 872 171 ACT 807 90

ACTH 808 51

N Events N Events

HR=0.45, 2P=1x10-9 HR=0.55, 2P=0.0005

ACT ACT

74%

87% 85%

66%

78%

87% 86%

68%

Years From Randomization

%

Page 13: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services
Page 14: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services
Page 15: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

•  Microbeam Radiation Therapy (MRT) uses highly collimated, quasi-parallel arrays of X-ray microbeams of 50-600 keV, produced by 3rd generation synchrotron sources"

•  The main features of highly brilliant Synchrotron sources are an extremely high dose rate in fractions of seconds and very small beam divergence "

Page 16: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services
Page 17: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

iKnife

Page 18: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Delays in diagnosis and treatment"

•  Most cancer operations are within 30 days"

•  Of 12,699 operations for breast, bowel and lung cancers 97% were in 45 days"

•  Nationally, 1090 patients waited longer than 30 days and 382 longer than 45 days"

www.myhospitals.gov.au/compare-hospitals"

Page 19: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Disparities"

•  ATSI experience higher incidence and mortality"

•  Remoteness is associated with a lower incidence and survival"

•  Incidence rises and survival falls with socioeconomic status"

Page 20: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Multidisciplinary Interactions

•  Received audits of MDCs across 123 hospitals and 5 cancer types breast prostate gynaecological, lung and cervix (520 surveys)"

•  60-70% hospitals had no MDTs in the 5 tumours"•  Most did not have the core members of a MDT"•  Most were face to face but 10-30% were

telemedicine"•  Less that half were 1 or 32 weekly"

Page 21: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

77-85% told patients that their case would be discussed by a MDT"

Specialists communicated the results to the patients"

Most meetings did not have links to supportive care (33-78% to palliative care)"

One third did not communicate their findings to GPs"Sporadic collection of data "

Page 22: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Reasons for not implementing an MDT"Lack of time"

Lack of co-ordination time"

Lack of staff resources"

Small case load"

Funding"

Page 23: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Taylor C et al Multidisciplinary team working in cancer: what is the evidence?BMJ 2010; 340 doi: http://dx.doi.org.ezproxy1.library.usyd.edu.au/10.1136/bmj.c951 (Published 23 March 2010) Cite this as: BMJ 2010;340:c951

•  In the UK, MDTs are associated with improved 5 year survival in colorectal, oesophageal, lung cancer and improved 2 year survival in head + neck cancer"

•  In Sweden, MDT show improved seven year relative survival from breast"

•  The relation between specialist surgery and improved survival in breast cancer and oesophageal cancer is now well established"

•  Evidence for multidisciplinary teams improving patient experience of care while effect on team members is equivocal"

•  The impact of multidisciplinary teams on team members is not well understood. "

Page 24: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services
Page 25: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

http://canceraustralia.gov.au/publications-and-resources/cancer-australia-publications/clinical-practice-guidelines-psychosocial-care-adults-cancer-summary-guide-health-professionals

Page 26: Ian Olver, Cancer Council Australia: Best practice and improving services

Integrative Care and CAMs Joske D Creating an Integrative Oncology Centre: the SolarisCare Experience in Olver I, Robotin M Perspectives on Complementary and Alternative Medicines"

•  There are centres such as the Solaris Centre at Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital "

•  CAMs are medicines that don’t have the same evidence base as traditional medicines"

•  The issues in integrating care:"–  Select treatments"–  Select therapists"–  Train volunteers "–  Research and measuring efficacy"–  Minimise medica-legal risk"