CHOS-WG Scenario: Oncology
Draft version 0.2, 9 Sept 2009, Etienne Saliez
- Introduction:
- Oncology is a domain in which collaborations are very critical
because many stakeholders are involved. These stakeholders work
normally in different location and have usually difficult to meet each
other.
- The purpose of this scenario is to identify:
- How far the generic requirements of the CHOS project are
valuable and sufficient
in the context of oncologic situations?
- Which "additional" informatics requirements are necessary in
case of oncology?
- Typical scenario:
- Stakeholders:
- Primary Care:
- The GP see many patients with many complaints and has to
identify the few
cases
which could be related to a beginning oncologic issue.
- The GP should recommend the patient to follow health
screening
schema, e.g. breast screening for women > 50. The GP should be
kept informed of the results.
- The GP has a global view on the patient health. The
GP should maintain a global problem list available at any time,
including past history, i.e. previous problems considered as
closed, although being still a low risk factor to take account of.
- In this scenario, the GP can ask specialized help for the
problem of a suspicion of tumor, as described below. Nevertheless
the GP remain the global coordinator of any other health issues the
patient could have.
- At any time the GP should have access to information
related to the
evolution of the oncologic problem.
- Health screening:
- Low cost mass detection and identification of a short list
of cases who should
go
through more comprehensive diagnostic procedures. The scope of
health
screenings is not limited to oncology. Their organization will be
discussed in a specific chapter. Anyway there are here also
communication needs.
- Organ specialist:
- Wherever the tumor could be located, the specialist of the
anatomic domain will confirms the diagnose, whoever it may be
e.g. gynecologist, urologist, pneumologist, etc...
- Invasive diagnostic test may be necessary.
- Pathology:
- A critical step to get a confirmation and to identify the
exact type of tumor and the
expected evolution, from very slow growing benign tumors to very
invasive cancers.
- In answer to every sample received the pathology lab with
provide a report.
Moreover a small lab could need to ask advice over images, to a remote
specialists as for example in the case of telemedicine provided by the iPath network.
- Oncologist:
- The oncologist has a coordination role about oncologic
issues. A central
role
in the choice of the treatment and the follow-up.
- Depending of the type of tumor, treatments are usually
planned
according to predefined schema's.
- Software requirements:
- The oncologist needs at least to share access to the
general purpose patient
record, as the other stakeholders hereabove.
- Maybe with a different presentation of the screens, more
directly focusing on the tumor and related issues.
- The principle is that a group of activities are ordered,
see
the generic activity scenario, ../ActivityManagement.html
, which may need here to be extended in function of oncology plannings.
- The oncologist contribute to the maintenance of the
"Problem List", which should remain available at any time for the
oncology team as well fo for all other partners in charge of the
patient.
- ..... ???
- Surgery:
- The tumor may need to be removed. See the generic
schema about surgery. Surgeon are usually organ oriented, e.g.
thorax surgeons, neurosurgeons, etc...
- During surgery material is normally sent again to the
pathology lab.
- Software:
- See the activities related to workflow of surgery.
- Radiotherapy:
- Standard appointment procedures, but here with the need of
series
of repetitive appointments.
- Software requirements:
- The radiotherapy scenario need a set of specialized
software dealing with 3D image processing and planning of the volume to
be irradiated, while preserving as far as possible the surrounding.
- This is not included in the basic common
software, but could well be shared as open source inside the
international radiotherapy community.
- Chemotherapy:
- A careful control of the hematologic situation is
required.
- Appointments as above.
- Often requiring the planning in a "one-day-care" in
hospital.
- Software:
- Here again at least the generic patient record software
as for the other clinicians, maybe with a presentation focusing on
hematologic parameters.
- Specific software can help for the monitoring of the
evolution and the computing of appropriate doses of chemotherapy.
- Home care, palliative medicine:
- Collaborations with the GP and nurses going at home.
- Research:
- A domain in which data collection for research is very
active.
The technical procedure are similar to what is necessary in other
domains of clinical research, e.g the need of anonymisation, of
statistical analysis tolls, etc...
- ....