A
Survivor's Map
Paradigm shift finds cancer patients no longer on their own.
By
Curtis Pesmen
In post-treatment America,
cancer survivorship is no longer just a pink-ribbon, 5K-run or yellow-wristband
state of mind. Survivorship is now a prescription—bearing
its own set of guidelines and, finally, its own treatment plan.
And now, with more than 10 million cancer survivors in the United
States, experts suggest it may soon become its own medical specialty,
like podiatry or geriatrics.
This was news, good news,
to me when I heard it—a guy who didn’t really know where
to turn after nine months of treatment in 2001 for stage 3 colorectal
cancer. Sure, I was glad to be off the toxic cocktails, yet I remember
feeling a faint sense of loss once my oncologist offered congrats
and set me free. I had gained a clean CT (computed tomography) scan,
but also had lost a family, of sorts, of caring professionals. I
was on my own.
Each year, more than 1.4
million Americans are diagnosed with cancer. Within months hundreds
of thousands of them will return to their “normal” lives
after treatment, feeling anything but normal and medically underserved,
according to the landmark recent report by the Institute of Medicine
and National Research Council, “From Cancer Patient to Cancer
Survivor: Lost in Transition.” Today, optimal survivorship
means medical care. It means you’re not quite alone, not merely
ticking off a one- or five-year countdown to the next all-clear.
The way breast cancer survivor Gretchen Hoag, 45, of Chapel Hill,
North Carolina, looks at it, “the perfect survivor isn’t
Lance Armstrong. The perfect survivor is you”—meaning
her, meaning all of us.
What
Oncologists Need to Know
Ellen Stovall, president
of the National Coalition for Cancer Survivorship and a 35-year
cancer survivor, says that after battling cancer in 1971 and a recurrence
12 years later, her medical record is literally a foot high. “If
you took the X-rays alone, they measure 8 inches high,” Stovall
says. “Within all those pages are several points of information
that are very important in terms of what tests I should be having
based on the levels of radiation exposure and the amount of chemotherapy
I had.”
She says the thought of
going from doctor to doctor to gather all the information for a
treatment summary and follow-up care plan can be overwhelming for
a patient. “The average person would never be able to do that,”
says Stovall, who served as co-editor of the Institute of Medicine
report on survivorship.
But help is on the way.
Indeed, in 2006, for the first time ever, the American Society of
Clinical Oncology chose “Advocating Survivorship” as
part of the theme for its massive annual meeting of almost 30,000
oncologists and other delegates from around the world. And as if
to drive the point home, for the third consecutive year, ASCO selected
a cancer survivor-oncologist to serve as its president.
A group of healthcare
professionals gathered for one of the ASCO sessions to learn the
specifics of optimal survivorship from Patricia Ganz, MD, director
of UCLA’s LIVESTRONG Cancer Survivorship Center of Excellence
and head of the division of cancer prevention and control research
at Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center in Los Angeles. As chairwoman
of the seminar, Dr. Ganz tried to make certain those in attendance
understood the significance of the 75-minute session, entitled “How
to Write a Survivorship Prescription.”
“Survivors have
always had these issues,” Dr. Ganz tells CURE. The
point is that the healthcare system is so complicated now and the
stress of not knowing how to navigate it is magnified.” Dr.
Ganz says survivors receive mixed messages about where they should
go and whom they should see for follow-up exams, flu shots and Pap
tests after being treated for cancer. With the ever-changing cycle
of insurance policies, primary care physicians and specialists,
many patients find it tough to keep up with their medical history
and long-term follow-up appointments.
“One of the biggest
complaints primary care physicians have after they refer a patient
to a cancer specialist is that they lose touch with the patient,”
said speaker Steven Woolf, MD, a primary care physician at Virginia
Commonwealth University, during the session. “In many cases,
they never see them again because of lack of communication.”
The seminar outlined a
plan where a patient’s oncology team is responsible for connecting
with the patient’s primary care physician during and after
treatment, with the understanding that after treatment is over,
the patient is referred back to the primary care physician. The
prescription plan calls for a one-page summary that includes treatment
regimens, side effects and a follow-up plan, which is updated over
time. “The way I see it, oncologists give a copy to the patient
and include one in their chart,” Dr. Ganz says. “The
patient has it, and it empowers the patient,” while providing
additional information to the primary care physician or future medical
team.
A survivorship plan is
also more than just a medical history. During treatment, patients
may not have had time to attend to their psychosocial needs, but
after treatment, doctors can use follow-up appointments as what
Dr. Ganz calls “a teachable moment,” referring the patient
to counseling, suggesting a smoking cessation program or having
the patient meet with a dietitian or physical therapist. “Survivors
are our best product in judging success and treatments. If we can’t
do a good job after we treat them, we haven’t accomplished
anything yet,” Dr. Ganz says.
Although Dr. Ganz was
disappointed the ASCO meeting hall wasn’t packed for the survivorship
prescription session, she told the physicians in attendance that
they were the early adopters, and it was up to them to pass along
the survivorship prescription plan to their institutions and colleagues.
“Many were anxious to start something,” she says. She
was also encouraged to see many advocates and survivors in the crowd.
“Patients play an important role. When a patient asks for
something, they get it. Increasing the demand makes it not just
another piece of paper, but turns it into something useable.”
Dr. Ganz’s colleagues
at the event talked about four other queries of interest:
- What are the optimal techniques for
surveillance for recurrence of a patient’s cancer, while
keeping close watch on the “rest” of the body?
- What are the main survivorship issues
for each type of cancer? For instance, older patients who receive
radiation and/or hormonal treatments for prostate or other cancers
may suffer premature osteoporosis and should be treated accordingly.
- Which post-chemotherapy side effects
demand the most vigilance from a survivor’s medical team?
Some breast cancer patients who take Herceptin, for example, have
an increased risk of heart damage.
- What is included in a treatment summary
and/or survivorship prescription plan (see sidebar)?
What
to Ask Your Doctors
Fortunately, these discussions
are no longer just concepts at medical meetings. “Cancer survivors
coming off treatment really need to be empowered to ask for summaries
of their treatment and to ask for a treatment plan,” says
Al Marcus, PhD, director of the LIVESTRONG Survivorship Center of
Excellence at the University of Colorado Cancer Center in Denver.
And the more specific, the better. He likes to see patients carrying
notebooks out of their oncologists’ offices, not a mere photocopy
of some future appointment. Indeed, a survivorship plan should include:
confirmation of diagnosis and hard copies to share with future doctors;
a listing of all treatments received; an outline of recommended,
coordinated surveillance for both recurrence and new cancer(s);
and finally, specific recommendations or tips for nutrition, exercise,
intimacy and/or rehabilitation.
At the Perini Family Survivors’
Center at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, these patient
“shoulds” or “should-be-tolds” have been
in place for more than a year, reports Craig Earle, MD, medical
director of the center’s adult survivorship program and a
key speaker at the ASCO survivorship seminar. Perhaps surprisingly,
however, Dr. Earle says cancer specialists don’t always make
the best quarterbacks for long-term, follow-up survivor care.
“Often we think of the medical oncologist as best suited,
but survivorship planning is equally important for patients who
saw only a surgeon for treatment. The most important thing is that
it is clear that someone will take responsibility for each aspect
of care, and that everyone knows who that will be.” Sometimes,
Dr. Earle says, it may be a general practitioner; other times, an
internist or a gynecologist might best supervise survivorship.
With grant funding provided
in part by the Lance Armstrong Foundation, the Dana-Farber adult
survivorship program relies on nurse practitioners to oversee a
good bit of survivorship care, in conjunction with the patient’s
team of doctors. Nurse practitioners spend time with the patient
on a regular basis looking for evidence of fatigue, depression,
joint or limb pain or other long-term health problems, such as lymphedema,
a common and often painful long-term effect following lymph node
removal or damage from radiation. The oncologist then creates a
targeted treatment summary and survivorship care plan that the patient
has explained by the nurse.
How
to Frame Survivor Emotions
Scott Leischow, PhD, professor
of family and community medicine and deputy director at the University
of Arizona Cancer Center in Tucson, believes survivors will soon
see more individually tailored plans, on a disease-by-disease basis,
with less mass appeal. That is, he asserts, once survivorship training
reaches a tipping point. “I’d like to see every single
cancer survivor given a clear menu of options unique to their cancer,”
Dr. Leischow says, “because survivorship for someone with
lung cancer means something very different than for someone with
colon cancer.”
Dr. Leischow’s short-term
hope is to find a way to fund patient navigators for each cancer
survivor at his medical center. Working with a navigator and toting
a prescribed, survivor treatment plan, the patient would then select
from a menu that includes: psychological support—one of the
most important, yet too often overlooked, resources at a patient’s
disposal—as well as drugs and other therapies. Plus, it would
direct how these pieces of the plan interact and play out over time.
“There would be a plan for the rest of their life,”
Dr. Leischow says, including financial and family plans, career
goals and an advocate.
Are these hopes, at once, too grand? Or can they be grounded in
the real world of oncology practice by, say, next year or the year
after? The prescriptions have been written; now it’s up to
us, and our doctors, to fill them.
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