Research priorities for cancers of the oesophagus and stomach: recommendations from a UK and Ireland patient and healthcare professional partnership exercise.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cancers of the oesophagus and stomach are a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Research is crucial to improving outcomes. However, to maximise value and impact, areas of focus should be prioritised in partnership with patients. OBJECTIVE: We undertook a comprehensive analysis of UK and Ireland patient and healthcare professional (HCP) priorities for research into oesophagogastric cancers across the domains of prevention, diagnosis and staging, treatment, palliative care and survivorship. DESIGN: A scoping exercise sourced research questions from patients and HCPs. These were consolidated and then confirmed by systematic review to represent a true research uncertainty. Research questions were scored on potential impact by an interdisciplinary group of HCPs and prioritised using a weighting derived from a patient survey. RESULTS: There were 835 (395 HCP, 440 patient) respondents to the scoping (n=455) and prioritisation (n=380) surveys. Across these, 4295 suggested research uncertainties were consolidated to 92 uncertainties that were prioritised. HCP respondents represented 25 professional groups from community and hospital settings. Patient weighting changed 22.2-46.3% of priority rankings established by HCPs. All domains were represented by the 20 highest priority questions, 5 of which focused on personalising and optimally combining treatment modalities. Two other key themes related to optimising nutrition and improving quality of life during and after treatment, including in patients not cured of their cancer. CONCLUSION: This work highlights the impact of patient input on HCP-ranked research priorities and provides a robust list of priorities to guide funders, policymakers and researchers to support and undertake impactful research.
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Acknowledgements: The authors are grateful for each patient, carer and healthcare professional who took the time to respond to the surveys that have formed the basis for this work. We are also indebted to the patient charities and professional organisations that have offered us support, and in particular to Guts UK for providing financial support to provide input from an independent informatician. We are in addition grateful to Dr Kristina Staley and TwoCan Associates for their support in identifying the relevant evidence base for the draft priorities generated from phase one of this work, and to Dr Catriona Gilmour Hamilton for her constructive feedback and enthusiasm at various points in the development of the project. Further, CMJ and CP wish to extend their thanks to the steering committee for freely volunteering their time and expertise for this exercise. CMJ is supported by a Clinical Lectureship part-funded by Cancer Research UK RadNet Cambridge (C17918/A28870). WHN received support to undertake this work via a Royal College of Radiologists Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship. DPM is supported by a Clinical Research Training Fellowship funded by the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Centre (SEBCATP-2024/100008). RCF is a recipient of a Programme Grant from the Medical Research Council (MR/W014122/1). PL is supported by the National Institute for Health & Care Research (NIHR) Imperial Biomedical Research Centre (BRC). VG is supported by the Wellcome/Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Centre for Medical Engineering at King’s College London. HIG is supported by the NIHR Leeds BRC (NIHR203331). MG is funded, in part, through the NIHR Southampton BRC and the NIHR Senior Investigator Scheme. ECS is supported by the NIHR Oxford BRC. CJP is supported by the NIHR Imperial BRC and HealthTech Research Centre - in vitro diagnostics. Views expressed in this manuscript are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the National Health Service, the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care.
Publication status: Published
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1468-3288

