Background: Many of the late effects of cancer treatment in childhood may occur even decades after the treatment, and only a minority of the survivors remain as healthy as their peers. Providing appropriate long-term care for childhood cancer survivors after transition to primary health care is a challenge. Both survivors and primary care providers need information on potential late effects. The lack of a systematic late effect follow-up plan may lead to excessive use of health care services or delayed intervention. While manual compilation of individual follow-up plans is time consuming for experienced clinicians, electronic algorithms may be feasible.
Procedure: In Finland, international guidelines for determining the risk of late effects have been implemented. Nationally, Turku University Hospital was asked with developing an automatized system for calculating the risk of late effects, based on electronic patient records saved in the hospital data lake. An electronic algorithm that uses details from exposure-based health screening guidelines published by the Children's Oncology Group was created. The results were compared with those manually extracted by an experienced clinician.
Results: Significant concordance between the manual and algorithm-based risk classification was found. A total of 355 patients received a classification using the algorithm, and 325 of those matched with the manual categorization, producing a Cohen's coefficient of 0.91 (95% confidence interval 0.88-0.95).
Conclusion: Automated algorithms can be used to categorize childhood cancer survivors efficiently and reliably into late effect risk groups. This further enables automatized compilation of appropriate individual late effect follow-up plan for all survivors.
Keywords: algorithm; childhood cancer survivor; electronic tool; late effect; long-term follow up.
© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.