A systematic review and meta-analysis on the impact of institutional peer review in radiation oncology.

IF 4.9 1区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY
Jane Jomy, Rachel Lu, Radha Sharma, Ke Xin Lin, David C Chen, Jeff Winter, Srinivas Raman
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Abstract

Background: Radiotherapy peer review is recognized as a key component of institutional quality assurance, though the impact is ill-defined. We conducted the first systematic review and meta-analysis to date to quantify the impact of institutional peer review on the treatment planning workflow including radiotherapy contours, prescription and dosimetry.

Methods: We searched several medical and healthcare databases from January 1, 2000, to May 25, 2024, for papers that report on the impact of institutional radiotherapy peer review on treatment plans. We conducted random-effects meta-analyses of proportions to summarize the rates of any change recommendation and major change recommendation (suggesting re-planning or re-simulation due to safety concerns) following peer review processes. To explore differences in change recommendations dependent on location, radiotherapy intent, technique, and peer review structure characteristics, we conducted analyses of variance.

Results: Of 9,487 citations, we identified 55 studies that report on 96,444 case audits in 10 countries across various disease sites. The pooled proportion of any change recommendation was 28 % (95 %CI = 21-35) and major change recommendation was 12 % (95 %CI = 7-18). Proportions of change recommendation were not impacted by any treatment characteristics. The most common reasons for change recommendation include target volume delineation (25/55; 45 %), target dose prescription (18/55; 33 %), organ at risk dose prescription (5/55; 9 %), and organ at risk volume delineation (3/55; 5 %).

Conclusions: Our review provides evidence that peer review results in treatment plan change recommendations in over one in four patients. The results suggest that some form of real-time, early peer review may be beneficial for all cases, irrespective of treatment intent or RT technique.

关于放射肿瘤学机构同行评审影响的系统回顾和荟萃分析。
背景:放疗同行评审被认为是机构质量保证的关键组成部分,但其影响尚不明确。我们进行了迄今为止的首次系统回顾和荟萃分析,以量化机构同行评审对治疗计划工作流程(包括放疗轮廓、处方和剂量测定)的影响:我们检索了 2000 年 1 月 1 日至 2024 年 5 月 25 日期间的多个医疗和保健数据库,以查找报告机构放射治疗同行评审对治疗计划影响的论文。我们对比例进行了随机效应荟萃分析,总结了同行评审过程中任何变更建议和重大变更建议(建议因安全问题重新规划或重新模拟)的发生率。为了探究不同地点、放疗目的、技术和同行评议结构特征在变更建议方面的差异,我们进行了方差分析:在9,487条引文中,我们确定了55项研究,这些研究报告了10个国家不同疾病部位的96,444个病例审核结果。任何变更建议的汇总比例为 28%(95 %CI = 21-35),重大变更建议的汇总比例为 12%(95 %CI = 7-18)。建议更改的比例不受任何治疗特征的影响。建议更改的最常见原因包括目标容积划定(25/55;45%)、目标剂量处方(18/55;33%)、风险器官剂量处方(5/55;9%)和风险器官容积划定(3/55;5%):我们的审查提供的证据表明,同行评审导致每四名患者中就有一名以上的患者被建议更改治疗方案。结果表明,无论治疗目的或 RT 技术如何,某种形式的实时、早期同行评审可能对所有病例都有益。
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来源期刊
Radiotherapy and Oncology
Radiotherapy and Oncology 医学-核医学
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
10.50%
发文量
2445
审稿时长
45 days
期刊介绍: Radiotherapy and Oncology publishes papers describing original research as well as review articles. It covers areas of interest relating to radiation oncology. This includes: clinical radiotherapy, combined modality treatment, translational studies, epidemiological outcomes, imaging, dosimetry, and radiation therapy planning, experimental work in radiobiology, chemobiology, hyperthermia and tumour biology, as well as data science in radiation oncology and physics aspects relevant to oncology.Papers on more general aspects of interest to the radiation oncologist including chemotherapy, surgery and immunology are also published.
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