Investigator

Frances Reid

Unknown Institution

Research Interests

FRFrances Reid
Papers(3)
Challenges and opport…Socioeconomic Burden …The every woman study…
Collaborators(10)
Lily MorrellMartin OrigaMikis EuripidesNada BenhimaPrecious Takondwa Mak…Raikhan BolatbekovaRuncie C.W. ChidebeAfrin F. ShaffiAndre IlbawiBasel Refky
Institutions(7)
Unknown InstitutionRti InternationalUganda Cancer Institu…Centre Hospitalier Un…Kamuzu Central Hospit…Kazakh Institute Of O…Mansoura University O…

Papers

Challenges and opportunities in ovarian cancer care: A qualitative study of clinician perspectives from 24 low- and middle-income countries

Ovarian cancer poses a significant and growing burden, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) where incidence and mortality are projected to increase by over 50 % by 2050. However, there is a critical lack of qualitative data on the challenges and opportunities for improvement in treatment and care for women with ovarian cancer in these regions. The aim of this research is to investigate clinicians' perspectives on the matter in 24 LMICs. As part of the multi-country observational Every Woman Study™ (EWS), semi-structured interviews were conducted with clinicians between June 2022 and June 2023. The interview guide was developed by the EWS LMIC Oversight Committee, including patients, clinicians and data specialists. Relational content and inductive thematic analyses were employed and categories synthesized using the World Health Organization's six building blocks of the Health Systems Framework. 24 clinicians (54 % female; 79 % gynaecologic oncologists, 8 % gynaecologists, 8 % clinical oncologists not specializing in gynaecological cancers, and 4 % clinical oncologists specializing in gynaecological cancers; 42 % from Africa, 29 % from Asia, 29 % from Latin America) participated. Six dominant themes were identified: "Poor Ovarian Cancer Data'', "Inequity in Access to Treatment", "In-Country Inequities in Access to Care", "Role of Cultural Norms on Women's Health", "Increased Engagement of Men in Ovarian Cancer Control", and "Advocacy and Education for Empowering Women". Content analysis revealed system-level challenges such as delayed drug payments, lack of population-based cancer data, and limited imaging facilities. Patient-level challenges included disparities in access to specialists, limited medication affordability, poor symptom recognition, and reliance on alternative treatments. This study reveals the complexity of ovarian cancer treatment and care in LMICs and the need to mitigate disparities in these regions, underscoring the need for patient-centred, context specific and intersectoral strategies to be considered in cancer planning to improve ovarian cancer care quality and equity in LMICs.

Socioeconomic Burden of Ovarian Cancer in 11 Countries

PURPOSE Ovarian cancer remains among the most aggressive tumors with the lowest survival probability. Projections are that ovarian cancer will claim more than 8 million lives between 2022 and 2050 without better prevention or control measures. METHODS We built an Excel-based instrument that uses a prevalence-based cost-of-illness approach and a societal perspective to estimate the burden of ovarian cancer. The instrument leverages data from editions of the World Ovarian Cancer Coalition's Every Woman Study, contains a micro-costing framework to assess the resources and costs of providing care, and uses data from novel systematic reviews and meta-analyses conducted to estimate the effect of ovarian cancer on patient labor productivity outcomes and the time caregivers devote to caring for people living with the disease. RESULTS Across 11 countries, we estimated US dollars 70 billion in socioeconomic losses attributable to ovarian cancer. Health expenditures to cover treatment in the first 2 years after diagnosis were 7, 41, and 118 times total health spending per capita in high-, upper-middle-, and low- and lower-middle countries, respectively. Patients spent 3,663 years traveling to or receiving treatment. Women lost labor productivity equivalent to 2.5 million workdays due to ill-health from ovarian cancer, and 9,403 women living with ovarian cancer or survivors were estimated to be missing from the workforce. Caregivers spent 17,112 person-years providing practical support to patients—an average of 33 days per woman living with ovarian cancer. CONCLUSION This study is the first to quantify the social and economic burden of ovarian cancer in 11 countries and highlights its significant cost and defines actions needed to improve ovarian cancer outcomes.

The every woman study™ low- and middle-income countries edition protocol: A multi-country observational study to assess opportunities and challenges to improving survival and quality of life for women with ovarian cancer

Background Ovarian cancer is a challenging disease to diagnose and treat effectively with five-year survival rates below 50%. Previous patient experience research in high-income countries highlighted common challenges and opportunities to improve survival and quality of life for women affected by ovarian cancer. However, no comparable data exist for low-and middle-income countries, where 70% of women with the disease live. This study aims to address this evidence gap. Methods This is an observational multi-country study set in low- and middle-income countries. We aim to recruit over 2000 women diagnosed with ovarian cancer across multiple hospitals in 24 countries in Asia, Africa and South America. Country sample sizes have been calculated (n = 70–96 participants /country), taking account of varying national five-year disease prevalence rates. Women within five years of their diagnosis, who are in contact with participating hospitals, are invited to take part in the study. A questionnaire has been adapted from a tool previously used in high-income countries. It comprises 57 multiple choice and two open-ended questions designed to collect information on demographics, women’s knowledge of ovarian cancer, route to diagnosis, access to treatments, surgery and genetic testing, support needs, the impact of the disease on women and their families, and their priorities for action. The questionnaire has been designed in English, translated into local languages and tested according to local ethics requirements. Questionnaires will be administered by a trained member of the clinical team. Conclusion This study will inform further research, advocacy, and action in low- and middle-income countries based on tailored approaches to the national, regional and global challenges and opportunities. In addition, participating countries can choose to repeat the study to track progress and the protocol can be adapted for other countries and other diseases.

6Works
3Papers
13Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsCarcinoma, Ovarian Epithelial
Keywords
ovarian cancerpatient experiencelow and middle-income countriesglobal health equity