Comprehensive global collaboration in the care of 1182 pediatric oncology patients over 12 years: The Iraqi-Italian experience.

cancer children developing countries pathology review pediatric oncology pediatric pathology teleconsultation telemedicine

Journal

Cancer medicine
ISSN: 2045-7634
Titre abrégé: Cancer Med
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101595310

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
01 2023
Historique:
revised: 11 05 2022
received: 22 02 2022
accepted: 17 05 2022
pubmed: 7 6 2022
medline: 20 1 2023
entrez: 6 6 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Iraq's health care system has gradually declined after several decades of wars, terrorism, and UN economic sanctions. The Oncology Unit at Children's Welfare Teaching Hospital (CWTH) in Baghdad was lacking basic facilities and support. To address this shortcoming, a humanitarian and educational partnership was established between CWTH and Sapienza University of Rome (SUR). We investigated the outcomes of 80 online and 16 onsite educational sessions and 142 teleconsultation sessions from 2006 to 2014. We also determined the outcomes of pathology reviews by SUR of 1216 tissue specimens submitted by CWTH from 2007 until 2019 for second opinions. The primary outcomes were discordance, concordance, and changes among clinical diagnoses and pathology review findings. The measures included the frequency of teleconsultation and tele-education sessions, the topics discussed in these sessions, and the number of pathology samples requiring second opinions. A total of 500 cases were discussed via teleconsultations during the study period. The median patient age was 7 years (range, 24 days to 16·4 years), and the cases comprised 79 benign tumors, 299 leukemias, 120 lymphomas, and 97 solid tumors. The teleconsultation sessions yielded 27 diagnostic changes, 123 confirmed diagnoses, and 13 equivocal impacts. The pathology reviews by SUR were concordant for 996 (81·9%) cases, discordant for 186 (15·3%), and inconclusive for 34 (2·8%). The major cause of discordance was inadequate immunohistochemical staining. The percentage of discordance markedly decreased over time (from 40% to 10%). The cause of the improvement is multifactorial: training of two CWTH pathologists at SUR, better immunohistochemical staining, and the ongoing clinical and pathologic telemedicine activities. The partnership yielded 12 publications, six posters, and three oral presentations by CWTH investigators. The exchange of knowledge and expertise across continental boundaries meaningfully improved the diagnoses and management of pediatric cancer at CWTH.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND
Iraq's health care system has gradually declined after several decades of wars, terrorism, and UN economic sanctions. The Oncology Unit at Children's Welfare Teaching Hospital (CWTH) in Baghdad was lacking basic facilities and support. To address this shortcoming, a humanitarian and educational partnership was established between CWTH and Sapienza University of Rome (SUR).
METHODS
We investigated the outcomes of 80 online and 16 onsite educational sessions and 142 teleconsultation sessions from 2006 to 2014. We also determined the outcomes of pathology reviews by SUR of 1216 tissue specimens submitted by CWTH from 2007 until 2019 for second opinions. The primary outcomes were discordance, concordance, and changes among clinical diagnoses and pathology review findings. The measures included the frequency of teleconsultation and tele-education sessions, the topics discussed in these sessions, and the number of pathology samples requiring second opinions.
FINDINGS
A total of 500 cases were discussed via teleconsultations during the study period. The median patient age was 7 years (range, 24 days to 16·4 years), and the cases comprised 79 benign tumors, 299 leukemias, 120 lymphomas, and 97 solid tumors. The teleconsultation sessions yielded 27 diagnostic changes, 123 confirmed diagnoses, and 13 equivocal impacts. The pathology reviews by SUR were concordant for 996 (81·9%) cases, discordant for 186 (15·3%), and inconclusive for 34 (2·8%). The major cause of discordance was inadequate immunohistochemical staining. The percentage of discordance markedly decreased over time (from 40% to 10%). The cause of the improvement is multifactorial: training of two CWTH pathologists at SUR, better immunohistochemical staining, and the ongoing clinical and pathologic telemedicine activities. The partnership yielded 12 publications, six posters, and three oral presentations by CWTH investigators.
INTERPRETATION
The exchange of knowledge and expertise across continental boundaries meaningfully improved the diagnoses and management of pediatric cancer at CWTH.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35661436
doi: 10.1002/cam4.4892
pmc: PMC9844594
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

256-265

Informations de copyright

© 2022 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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Auteurs

Mazin Faisal Al-Jadiry (MF)

Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Baghdad, Oncology Unit-Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Stefania Uccini (S)

Clinical and Molecular Medicine, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy.

Anna Maria Testi (AM)

Hematology, Department of Translational and Precision Medicine, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy.

Maria Luisa Moleti (ML)

Hematology, Department of Translational and Precision Medicine, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy.

Adil Rabeea Alsaadawi (AR)

Central Teaching Laboratory, Medical City, Pathology, Baghdad, Iraq.

Amir Fadhil Al-Darraji (AF)

Oncology Unit, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Raghad Majid Al-Saeed (RM)

Oncology Unit, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Safaa A Faraj Al-Badri (SA)

College of Medicine- Wasit University, Children's Welfare Teaching Hospital-Pediatric Oncology Unit, Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Ahmed Hatem Sabhan (AH)

Oncology Unit, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Hasanein Habeeb Ghali (HH)

Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Baghdad, Oncology Unit-Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Samaher Abdulrazzaq Fadhil (SA)

Oncology Unit, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Wisam Majeed Abed (WM)

Hematology Laboratory Department, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Najiha Ahmed Ameen (NA)

Hematology Laboratory Department, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Yasir Saadoon Abed (YS)

Oncology Unit, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Fawaz Salim Yousif (FS)

Oncology Unit, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Aseel Rashid Abed (AR)

Oncology Unit, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Hanadi Munaf Hussein (HM)

Oncology Unit, Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

Ahmed Mudhafar Shkara (AM)

Department of Pharmaceutics-College of Pharmacy, University of Baghdad, Baghdad, Iraq.

Alfonso Piciocchi (A)

GIMEMA Data Center, GIMEMA Foundation, Rome, Italy.

Sara Mohamed (S)

Hematology, Department of Translational and Precision Medicine, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy.

Luigi Ruco (L)

Clinical and Molecular Medicine, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy.

Ibrahim Qaddoumi (I)

Department of Global Pediatric Medicine, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA.

Salma Abbas Al-Hadad (SA)

Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Baghdad, Oncology Unit-Children Welfare Teaching Hospital-Medical City, Baghdad, Iraq.

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