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PANCARE

Country: Netherlands
4 Projects, page 1 of 1
  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 824982
    Overall Budget: 3,999,870 EURFunder Contribution: 3,999,870 EUR

    The 5-year survival for children with cancer increased from 30% in the 1970s to more than 80% at present. There are up to 300,000 childhood cancer survivors in Europe and this number is increasing. Years after treatment, childhood cancer survivors are at high risk for developing health and psychosocial late effects, resulting in excess morbidity and mortality compared the general population. The impact on the quality of life (QoL) of survivors and their families, as well as the societal and economic burdens, are significant. However, these impacts can be reduced by long-term survivorship care to detect treatable disease at an early phase and start timely interventions to preserve health, improve QoL, as well as coordinate specialised care and empower survivors. Implementing follow-up care, especially for young adult and adult survivors of childhood cancer, has proven challenging across Europe. These survivors have left paediatric care and most of them have no opportunity to visit experts in survivorship care. To improve survivorship care for these survivors across Europe, PanCareFollowUp will conduct a prospective cohort study to assess effectiveness, value, cost effectiveness and feasibility of the PanCareFollowUp Care intervention, a person-centred approach to survivor follow-up care based on international clinical guidelines for surveillance of late effects. PanCareFollowUp also includes the development and assessment of a personalised, guideline-based eHealth lifestyle intervention. Ensuring that the PanCareFollowUp interventions are used in the real world is paramount to achieving enduring improvements to survivorship care. Hence, the project includes the development of materials to support sustainable maintenance and replication of the PanCareFollowUp interventions. The PanCare network will become the guardian of the interventions after the project, ensuring that the intervention materials are openly available, sustainably maintained and widely shared.

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 101136549
    Overall Budget: 7,131,750 EURFunder Contribution: 5,907,680 EUR

    Cancer affects 35,000 children, adolescents and young adults (CAYAC) in Europe each year. Current 5-year survival rates are 80%, but the intensive oncological treatments leave CAYAC Survivors (CAYACS) at increased risk of cancer or treatment-induced late health effects, excess morbidity and mortality, and reduced quality of life (QoL). Follow-up care of survivors includes monitoring of cancers, managing all types of late effects, and maintaining overall health. It should also involve considering the needs of families whose functioning has been disrupted by cancer. There are several challenges providing follow-up care for CAYACS and their families: i) it is resource-demanding in an overburdened healthcare system, ii) psychosocial and supportive care needs are often unmet, and iii) access is inequal between European countries. The overall goal of e-QuoL is to use e-health tools to promote Equity in Quality of Life for CAYACS and their families. It will adapt an existing interoperable personalised e-Health tool that can be used alone or as an add-on module to existing tools such as digital survivorship care plans already used in several European countries. Through participatory research, involving CAYACS, families, associations, networks, health institutes, social sciences and humanities researchers and industrial partners from 15 different countries and backgrounds, we will i) identify the unmet needs of CAYAC families and survivors’ (including vulnerable groups: young age and cognitive impairments) and ii) adapt accessible and affordable tools to address these needs. These tools will provide a person-centred approach from medical follow-up, preventive behaviours (e.g. physical activity, nutrition), psychological and social support (e.g. education, employment) to related health information (e.g. on reproductive issues). Ultimately, e-QuoL will improve CAYACS’ QoL by enabling them to actively engage in their care and better self-manage their health and well-being. This action is part of the Cancer Mission cluster of projects on “Quality of Life.

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 899999
    Overall Budget: 4,000,000 EURFunder Contribution: 4,000,000 EUR

    Almost 500,000 former childhood cancer patients (CCS) are now living in Europe. Compared to the general population, CCS represent a vulnerable population as they are at an increased risk of developing health problems, known as late effects, resulting in excess morbidity and mortality. Many survivors are unaware of their personal risk for specific late effects, which reduces their ability to manage their own follow-up care. Similarly, their treating healthcare professionals (HCPs) lack information about care required for CCS and access to treatment data from their childhood cancer. The Survivorship Passport (SurPass) is an innovative, digital tool, developed in previous EU-funded projects, that can be used to overcome these knowledge gaps to improve people-centred long-term survivorship care. Importantly, end users (CCS, HCPs) are integral to the research, represented by three key stakeholder networks (PanCare, SIOP Europe, CCI Europe). PanCareSurPass will conduct a robust assessment of the implementation of the SurPass by first conducting a pre-implementation study in six countries (Austria, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Spain) representing three infrastructural scenarios in Europe. Ethical, structural, organisational, economical, national, local, privacy issues, health systems, and particular national circumstances will be taken into account throughout. An Implementation Strategy will be developed and the SurPass will be updated and validated before use in an implementation study in the six countries. The study will look at a range of outcomes including CCS activation and empowerment, CCS/HCP satisfaction with the tool, feasibility and health economics. Based on the results of the study, a Prediction Model will be developed to promote and support future implementation of the SurPass across Europe.

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  • Funder: European Commission Project Code: 101213107
    Overall Budget: 5,770,230 EURFunder Contribution: 5,770,230 EUR

    Survivors of AYA cancer are at risk of treatment-related mortality and morbidity (late effects). The impact on the quality of life (QoL) of AYA cancer survivors and their families, as well as the societal and economic burdens, is significant. However, these impacts can be prevented or reduced by long-term, systematic screening and follow-up (Survivorship Care), which enables the early detection of treatable late effects and timely interventions to preserve health, increase empowerment, manage chronic conditions and improve QoL. PanCare4AYA will improve Survivorship Care for AYA cancer survivors across Europe by developing an international clinical guideline for screening and follow-up. This guideline will be implemented via a novel person-centred screening programme (AYA Cancer Survivor Screen). An implementation study involving 1,000 AYA cancer survivors in 11 European countries (Croatia, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom) will be conducted to test the AYA Cancer Survivor Screen programme, including peer support. The study will look at effectiveness (empowerment, mental health, psychosocial functioning and other QoL-related outcomes), healthcare delivery and screening-related health, experiences of AYA cancer survivors and HCPs with implementing the state-of-the-art screening programme within a range of different healthcare settings, and feasibility. Innovative digital tools will be used in France, Italy, Lithuania and Netherlands. Ensuring the scalability of the AYA Cancer Survivor Screen programme is crucial for achieving enduring, real-world improvements to Survivorship Care for AYA cancer survivors. Therefore, the project includes the assessment of barriers and facilitators for the screening programme and development of freely available materials to support sustainable maintenance and scale-up of AYA Cancer Survivor Screen in additional clinics in future. This action is part of the Cancer Mission cluster of projects on “Quality of life (AYA)”.

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