Over 14,000 patients aged 15-24 are estimated to be diagnosed with cancer in the EU each year. Teenagers and Young Adults (TYA) often fall down gaps between children's and adults cancer services. The specific challenges of providing optimal care to them are described, but we present a summary of recent progress. Progress to overcome these challenges is happening at different rates across Europe. We summarise the European national projects in this field but more recently we have seen the beginnings of European co-ordination. Within the EU FP7 European Network for Cancer Research in Children and Adolescents program (ENCCA) a specific European Network for Teenagers and Young Adults with Cancer (ENTYAC) has held a series of scientific meetings, including professionals, patients and caregivers. This group has proposed unanswered research questions and agreed key features of a high quality service that can improve outcomes for TYA with cancer, including the primacy of collaboration between adult and pediatric services to eliminate the gap in the management of TYA with cancer.
A scoping exercise to define the preferred competencies of professionals involved in teenage and young adult (TYA) cancer care. Data were generated during two workshops with health professionals. In groups, they ranked skills, knowledge and attitudes, previously identified through a literature search, onto a diamond template. Data were also used from an education day with TYA professionals, who generated lists of key skills, knowledge and attitudes. Individually, professionals then selected the top five areas of competence to care for young people with cancer. The workshops generated three diamonds, which exhibited agreement of 13 principle skills, knowledge and attitudes. The top two being: 'expertise in treating paediatric and adult cancers' and 'understanding cancer'. The data from the education day suggested communication, technical knowledge and teamwork as being core role features for professionals who care for young people with cancer. Integration of both datasets; one derived inductively, the other deductively provides a comprehensive outline of core skills health professionals require to be proficient in young people's cancer care. These results will form the basis of future discussion around workforce strategies and inform a Delphi survey.
The assessment of febrile neutropenia is problematic. C-reactive protein (CRP) values alone do not differentiate those patients with microbiologically documented infections from those with unexplained fevers. Plasma interleukin-6 (IL-6), measured by ELISA, was correlated with different diagnostic groups in 47 episodes of febrile neutropenia in children. Samples were collected daily from admission until resolution of fever. On admission, the median IL-6 value for gram-negative infections was 1610 pg/ml (range, 896-40,000), for gram-positive infections it was 138 pg/ml (range, 66-1045), and for unexplained fevers it was 50 pg/ml (range, 24-135, with a single high value of 665 pg/ml). These medians were significantly different (P less than .005). There was no significant difference in median CRP values. IL-6 values peaked 24-48 h before CRP values. There was a positive correlation of IL-6 with the presence of fever. Plasma IL-6 may be a more sensitive marker than CRP of acute infection and should prove useful in the assessment of fevers in these patients.
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