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. 2022 Feb 25;12(2):e055213. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-055213

Protocol for a systematic review of the financial burden experienced by people affected by head and neck cancer

Nikki McCaffrey 1,2,, Lidia Engel 1
PMCID: PMC8883271  PMID: 35217539

Abstract

Introduction

Head and neck cancer (HNC) is the seventh most common cancer worldwide. Treatment may be associated with the inability to work and substantial out-of-pocket expenses. However, to date, there is little research synthesising quantitative evidence on the financial burden experienced by people affected by HNCs, including family members and informal carers. The purpose of this systematic review is to estimate out-of-pocket costs, reduced or lost income and informal care costs associated with HNC, identify categories of financial burden and investigate which costs predominate when considering financial burden in this population.

Methods and analysis

A comprehensive search of peer-reviewed literature will be conducted for articles published from 01/01/2010 to 19/03/2021 (CINAHL, Cochrane library, EconLit, Embase, Medline Complete). Published, English-language articles describing primary and secondary research directly related to the topic and quantitative cost data will be included. One researcher will complete the searches and screen results for potentially eligible studies. Three other researchers will independently screen the titles and abstracts of a subset of 30% citations, that is, 10% each. Full text articles will be independently screened by three reviewers. Any disagreement will be resolved by consensus among the team. Study and patient characteristics, cost categories and financial burden will be independently extracted by one reviewer and checked by a second. Methodological quality will be evaluated independently by two reviewers. Descriptive analyses will be undertaken and a narrative summary of the included studies will be provided.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethics approval is not required to conduct this research because this is a planned systematic review of published literature. Findings will be presented at leading cancer and health economic conferences, published in a peer-reviewed journal and disseminated via website postings and social media channels.

Systematic review registration number

CRD42021252929.

Keywords: head & neck tumours, health economics, health policy


Strengths and limitations of this study.

  • The planned systematic review will provide insights into the financial burden faced by patients and families to inform the development of appropriate strategies for improving financial well-being in people affected by head and neck cancer.

  • The systematic review protocol is reported according to the recommendations of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA-P) statement and is registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO).

  • The total number of studies investigating the financial burden experienced by people affected by head and neck cancer may be small; study methods may be heterogeneous; and cost estimates may be derived from diverse health financing systems, limiting study findings.

Introduction

Head and neck cancer (HNC) is ranked as one of the top 10 cancers globally with over 850 000 new cases diagnosed each year.1 2 Incidence is anticipated to continue rising with more than one million new cases each year predicted by 2030.2 Generally, HNC begins in the squamous cells of the mouth, throat and nose and includes cancers of the oral cavity, nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses, salivary glands, pharynx and larynx,3 and thus far, there is no effective screening strategy for HNC. Meticulous physical examination is the key approach for early detection.4 Treatment may involve chemotherapy, radiotherapy, surgery or typically, a combination of these approaches, particularly in later stages.3 Many patients experience substantial functional impairment due to the location of the tumour, such as loss of speech, difficulties with swallowing and speech and challenges with eating5 and symptoms associated with HNC, and its treatment include pain, breathlessness, dry mouth, fatigue and depression.6 7

People affected by cancer can experience substantial out-of-pocket expenses associated with treatment costs, travel expenses and reduced household income from a diminished ability to continue paid employment.8 9 Informal carers, that is, people who provide ongoing, regular assistance to a person with chronic, progressive or life-limiting illness, typically without receiving payment for the assistance they provide,10–12 also report significant financial burden particularly related to reduced income and the costs of care time.13 14 Financial burden has been associated with greater mortality risk, poorer quality of life, worse symptoms and reduced concordance with treatment advice.15–18 Consequently, promoting financial well-being is a vital component of supportive care for people affected by cancer. Increasingly, clinical practice guidelines recommend discussion of the possible costs of cancer care and potential financial burden to patients and families, particularly in vulnerable groups such as low socioeconomic status populations.19 As socioeconomically deprived groups are disproportionally affected by HNC,20–22 managing financial burden is particular germane for people with this type of cancer.

While attempts have been made to summarise and quantify the financial burden experienced by people affected by a broad range of cancer types,8 23–27 thus far, such information for people impacted by HNC is lacking. This information will help inform the development of appropriate policies, programmes and strategies for improving financial well-being in this population. Consequently, the aim of this systematic review is to address this gap in knowledge by synthesising evidence on the constituents and magnitude of financial burden faced by patients and families affected by HNC.

Review questions

This systematic review addresses three related research questions:

  1. What is the financial burden faced by people affected by HNC?

  2. What are the main categories of out-of-pocket expenses faced by people affected by HNC?

  3. Which types of cost cause the greatest financial burden for people affected by HNC?

Methods

This protocol is reported according to the recommendations of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA-P) statement.28

Eligibility criteria

Published, peer-reviewed, English-language articles reporting primary and secondary research directly related to the topic and quantitative cost data will be eligible for inclusion in the systematic review.

Inclusion criteria

  • Studies including people affected by HNC, that is, patients, families and informal carers;

  • Studies reporting and quantifying costs borne by patients and families; and

  • Primary and secondary research directly related to the topic, that is, there will be no restrictions regarding research design.

Exclusion criteria

  • Studies reporting qualitative data only;

  • Studies which do not report cost estimates;

  • Economic evaluations; and

  • Non-English articles and those not peer reviewed, including comment or discussion papers, editorials, conference abstracts or papers and the grey literature.

Search strategy

A comprehensive search of the literature will be conducted from 1 January 2010 to the date of the search (CINAHL, Cochrane library, EconLit, Embase, MEDLINE Complete) to identify relevant published studies fitting the inclusion criteria. Studies published before 2010 were excluded due to more recent advances in HNC management which will affect the relative level of financial burden experienced by people with HNC.29–31 Keywords and subject headings, derived from previously conducted systematic reviews of financial burden or toxicity in people affected by cancer9 23 26 and the advice of the Deakin University School of Health and Social Development liaison librarian, include the following: patient, family, carer, caregivers, cancer survivors, HNC, head and neck neoplasms, financial burden, financial toxicity, financial stress, economic hardship, costs and cost analysis and economics. The search strategies are described in the online supplemental file.

Supplementary data

bmjopen-2021-055213supp001.pdf (122.7KB, pdf)

Backwards and forwards citation tracing of included articles will be conducted for additional literature unidentified by the search. Searches will be restricted to the English language only. Search results will be downloaded into Thomson Reuters EndNote V. X9.2 (2019) libraries and Rayyan software32 will be used to manage records throughout the review.

Selection process

Step 1: The titles and abstracts of the studies identified by the search will be screened independently by one researcher (SK) to determine eligibility for inclusion in the review. Full text articles will be retrieved when there is insufficient information to judge relevance. Corresponding authors will be contacted to ascertain whether studies meet inclusion criteria if necessary. Three researchers (NM, LE, SA) will independently screen a subset of 30% citations, that is, 10% each. Agreement between the reviewers will be assessed using the Kappa statistic to determine if further duplicate title and abstract reviewing is required (Kappa <0.4, ie, fair agreement).33 If required, an additional 25% of citations will be screened (NM, LE, SA).

Step 2: The full text articles of potentially eligible studies will be retrieved and independently assessed by three reviewers (NM, LE, SK). Backwards and forwards citation tracing of included articles will be conducted for additional literature unidentified by the search.

Any disagreement will be resolved by consensus among the team.

Risk of bias assessment

The methodological quality of the included studies will be evaluated independently by two reviewers (NM, LE) using Larg and Moss’s guide to critical evaluation of cost-of-illness studies34 and the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology guidelines for observational studies35 critical appraisal checklists. Any disagreement will be resolved by consensus among the team.

Data collection

A table will be created in Microsoft Office Excel 2013 to extract data from the included studies and summarise information about the constituents and magnitude of the financial burden for people affected by HNC. This software will be used to handle data throughout the review. The form will be piloted with two of the included articles and updated accordingly. Extracted information will include study characteristics (first author’s name, publication date, country of origin, design, intervention), study population (age, gender, primary tumour site, sample size, subgroup), timeframe, costs categorised in line with the recommendations of the second panel on cost-effectiveness in health and medicine (formal healthcare sector, informal healthcare sector and non-health care sectors),36 and lost patient income and lost informal carer income. The views of a third reviewer (SA) will be sought where there is ambiguity or disagreement.

Data synthesis

A narrative synthesis of the included studies will be provided in accordance with guidance from the Cochrane Collaboration.37 A meta-analysis will not be conducted given the anticipated heterogeneity between studies.38 Three tables summarising the key features of the included studies, cost components and quality assessment will be presented. Similarities and differences between the studies and results will be reported and cost estimates will be converted into 2020 Australian dollars using the CCEMG-EPPI-Centre Cost Converter.39 If feasible, average costs per category will be calculated and all costs will be converted to annual figures to enable comparability. All relevant studies will be included in the review and an assessment of how risk of bias may have affected the main results and outcome measures will be presented. Finally, the strength of the body of evidence will be independently assessed by two reviewers (NM, LE) using the GRADE guidelines.40 The views of a third reviewer (SA) will be sought where there is ambiguity or disagreement.

Ethics and dissemination

Ethics approval to conduct this research is not required because this study is a planned systematic review of published literature. The protocol is registered with PROSPERO (CRD42021252929). Findings will be presented at leading cancer and health economic conferences, published in a peer-reviewed journal and disseminated via website postings such as the Deakin University Institute for Health Transformation LinkedIn website and social media channels such as Twitter (eg, @DHE_Deakin, @IHT_Deakin) and Facebook.

Supplementary Material

Reviewer comments
Author's manuscript

Acknowledgments

Many thanks to the Deakin University School of Health and Social Development liaison librarian, Rachel West, for her advice on the search strategy, and Snehal Kulkarni (SK) and Siti Mohamad Asfia (SA) for agreeing to screen the titles and abstracts.

Footnotes

Contributors: NM led the conception and design of the work with input from LE. NM drafted the work and LE revised the protocol and manuscript critically for comment. Both authors approved the final version to be published and are accountable for all aspects of the work. NM is the guarantor for the overall content.

Funding: The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Competing interests: None declared.

Provenance and peer review: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

Supplemental material: This content has been supplied by the author(s). It has not been vetted by BMJ Publishing Group Limited (BMJ) and may not have been peer-reviewed. Any opinions or recommendations discussed are solely those of the author(s) and are not endorsed by BMJ. BMJ disclaims all liability and responsibility arising from any reliance placed on the content. Where the content includes any translated material, BMJ does not warrant the accuracy and reliability of the translations (including but not limited to local regulations, clinical guidelines, terminology, drug names and drug dosages), and is not responsible for any error and/or omissions arising from translation and adaptation or otherwise.

Ethics statements

Patient consent for publication

Not applicable.

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

Supplementary data

bmjopen-2021-055213supp001.pdf (122.7KB, pdf)

Reviewer comments
Author's manuscript

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