Radiotherapy is an available treatment for management of basal cell carcinoma (BCC). This study aims to analyse the published literature about radiotherapy in treatment of BCC. A focus of this study will be to compare the dosing regimens adopted in these studies. A search of the Medline database was conducted from 1984 to August 2013. Search terms used were 'basal cell carcinoma', 'radiotherapy', 'epithelial skin cancer' and 'external irradiation'. Fourteen studies on the use of radiotherapy for BCC were included. Seven studies included only cases of BCC, while six studies also included patients treated for squamous cell carcinoma. The overall cure rates ranged from 79·2% to 100%. More than 90% of the patients reported good or excellent aesthetic outcome from radiotherapy (three studies). There was a wide variation in the total dose and dose per fraction of radiotherapy used. Nine studies utilized dosing regimens within the recommended guidelines of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network. There are a limited number of high-quality prospective studies of radiotherapy for BCC. Based on the available evidence, radiotherapy provides a high rate of local control with low rates of complications that are comparable with surgery.
Long term health conditions either wholly or partly diet-related continue to increase. Although pharmacists and allied health professionals (AHPs) have a role in the management of patients with long term conditions, there is limited research exploring whether pharmacists and AHPs other than dietitians have a role in the delivery of dietary advice. This research aimed to explore their views regarding the provision of dietary advice to patients. The research involved a qualitative methodology utilising five uni-professional focus groups with a total of 23 participants. All groups considered the provision of dietary advice in the context of their own professional roles, discussed issues relating to referral to the dietitian for specialist advice and most discussed the need for written information. Interprofessional and collaborative working is needed to maximise the role in the delivery of dietary advice, access to evidence based nutritional information and utlisation of referral pathways across pharmacists and AHPs to ensure the timely provision of nutritional advice to patients. There is a potential role for dietitians to take the lead and further research should focus on this area.
Introduction
Men with prostate cancer may receive radiotherapy as part of their management. They encounter a range of information related to radiotherapy, and a crucial role for therapeutic radiographers and other healthcare practitioners is ensuring patients receive appropriate information related to their treatment. This integrative review aims to identify, synthesise and analyse literature reporting experiences of men with localised prostate cancer related to information in radiotherapy.
Methods
A systematic literature search encompassing database and hand searches was carried out between February and March 2017 with date limits of 2000–2017 applied. Initially, 4,954 articles were identified. Systematic screening and detailed examination identified that 33 met the inclusion criteria. Data were synthesised and analysed thematically.
Results
Few studies explicitly addressed the issue of information in radiotherapy for men with localised prostate cancer. Themes that emerged and were explored are information needs, information regarding adverse effects, information and time, information preferences, satisfaction with information related to radiotherapy and patient experience related to radiotherapy information.
Conclusion
This review suggests that although several aspects related to information for men with localised prostate cancer have been documented, few were explored in detail with respect to radiotherapy indicating that further research in this area is warranted.
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