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P. Butow



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    P1.22 - Poster Session 1 - Epidemiology, Etiology (ID 166)

    • Event: WCLC 2013
    • Type: Poster Session
    • Track: Prevention & Epidemiology
    • Presentations: 1
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      P1.22-008 - Identifying evidence-practice gaps in lung cancer and priority setting with clinicians in NSW, Australia. (ID 2518)

      09:30 - 16:30  |  Author(s): P. Butow

      • Abstract

      Background
      Implementation Science has emerged over the past 20 years to highlight a fundamental problem in health care: that knowledge about optimal care is not applied in clinical practice. A ‘gap analysis’ is an initial research activity undertaken when quantifying the gap between existing knowledge and clinical practice. The purpose of this presentation is to describe outcomes of a gap analysis conducted in lung cancer and priority setting focus groups held with oncology health professionals. This research is being conducted by Sydney Catalyst, a Translational Cancer Research Centre that brings together teams of clinicians and researchers from more than 20 member organisations across NSW, Australia, for the purpose of facilitating rapid translation of scientific evidence into clinical practice and policy.

      Methods
      A systematic approach was used to examine the evidence across the lung cancer patient journey. Data sources included international and national clinical practice guidelines, systematic reviews and meta-analyses, and research from peer reviewed publications, including population-based patterns of care studies and data linkage studies. We also conducted a descriptive analysis of data from clinical cancer registries and administrative databases used in the local setting of Sydney and regional NSW, Australia, to determine what gaps were locally relevant. All data sources were reviewed and synthesised to create the list of evidence-practice gaps. The gaps are presently being tested in three focus groups in urban and regional cancer services in NSW, Australia. Focus group participants include specialists in lung and thoracic oncology, medical, nursing, allied health and supportive care health professionals. The purpose of these focus groups is to conduct a priority setting exercise, where clinicians can rate the relevance of gaps to the local context and agree on which gaps should first be addressed in any subsequent research projects.

      Results
      Seven evidence-practice gaps were identified across the patient journey (from initial presentation and diagnosis through to palliative care). We analysed 2008 data from one local hospital for all lung cancer patients (N=329) and found that local patterns of care appear to be consistent with those previously observed in a NSW patterns of care study. This assists in demonstrating that gaps identified at the population level are also present in local health care settings and strengthens a rationale for developing collaborative lung cancer specific research projects that engage clinicians and researchers. The analysis and outcomes of focus groups will be presented, along with a critical appraisal of the gap analysis methodology and show how this approach in lung cancer is relevant to other tumour groups and health conditions.

      Conclusion
      A gap analysis enables researchers and clinicians to identify where deficiencies exist between published research evidence and optimal patient care. By drawing together and synthesizing data from multiple sources of evidence, identifying gaps and setting priorities with local health professionals, we believe we can address the goal of more rapidly translating evidence into practice.