Abstract

Background: The multi-disciplinary tumor board (MTB) is essential to quality cancer care and currently recommended to offer the best personalized clinical approach, but little has been published regarding MTBs in neuro-oncology (nMTBs). The aim of the present paper is to describe our nMTB, to evaluate its impact on clinical management decisions, and to assess the role of neuroradiologists. Methods: The retrospective evaluation of the cases discussed at our nMTB from March 2017 to March 2020. From the electronic records, we extracted epidemiological, clinical and other specific data of nMTB. From the radiological records, we calculated data relating to the number, time for revision, and other specifications of MRI re-evaluation. Statistical analysis was performed. Results: a total of 447 discussions were analyzed, representing 342 patients. The requests for case evaluations came from radiation oncologists (58.8%) and neurosurgeons (40.5%), and were mainly addressed to the neuroradiologist (73.8%). The most frequent questions were about the treatment’s changes (64.4%). The change in patient treatment was reported in 40.5% of cases, 76.8% of these were based on the neuroradiologic assessment. A total of 1514 MRI examinations were re-evaluated, employing approximately 67 h overall. The median of the MRI exams reviewed per patient was 3 (min–max 1–12). Conclusions: Our study supported that the multidisciplinary approach to patient care can be particularly effective in managing brain tumors. A review by an expert neuroradiologist impacts patient management in the context of nMTBs, but has costs in terms of the time and effort spent preparing for it.

Highlights

  • Multi-disciplinary tumor board meetings (MTBs) are considered essential for quality cancer care and are currently recommended to offer the best personalized clinical approach.Quality cancer care is complex and depends on the careful coordination between multiple treatments and providers, technical information exchange, and regular communication flow between all involved parties [1,2]

  • The requests for case evaluations came almost exclusively from the radiation oncologists (58.8%) and neurosurgeons (40.5%), and were mainly addressed to the neuroradiologists

  • multi-disciplinary tumor board (MTB) are formal meetings in which networks of specialists devoted to the care of cancer patients meet to discuss diagnosis and management

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Summary

Introduction

Multi-disciplinary tumor board meetings (MTBs) are considered essential for quality cancer care and are currently recommended to offer the best personalized clinical approach.Quality cancer care is complex and depends on the careful coordination between multiple treatments and providers, technical information exchange, and regular communication flow between all involved parties [1,2]. Multi-disciplinary tumor board meetings (MTBs) are considered essential for quality cancer care and are currently recommended to offer the best personalized clinical approach. MTBs represent a moment of multidisciplinary management of the diagnostic–therapeutic path of cancer patients based on the collegial discussion of individual cases. This is especially helpful in complex cases with a clinically and/or radiologically difficult context in both the diagnosis and follow-up phase. The multi-disciplinary tumor board (MTB) is essential to quality cancer care and currently recommended to offer the best personalized clinical approach, but little has been published regarding MTBs in neuro-oncology (nMTBs).

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