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Determining the Research Priorities for Adult Primary Brain Tumours in Australia and New Zealand: A Delphi Study with Consumers, Health Professionals, and Researchers

Authors :
Georgia K. B. Halkett
Lauren J. Breen
Melissa Berg
Rebecca Sampson
Hao-Wen Sim
Hui K. Gan
Benjamin Y. Kong
Anna K. Nowak
Bryan W. Day
Rosemary Harrup
Melissa James
Frank Saran
Brett Mcfarlane
Chris Tse
Eng-Siew Koh
Source :
Current Oncology, Vol 29, Iss 12, Pp 9928-9955 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2022.

Abstract

The aim of this project was to determine research priorities, barriers, and enablers for adult primary brain tumour research in Australia and New Zealand. Consumers, health professionals, and researchers were invited to participate in a two-phase modified Delphi study. Phase 1 comprised an initial online survey (n = 91) and then focus groups (n = 29) which identified 60 key research topics, 26 barriers, and 32 enablers. Phase 2 comprised two online surveys to (1) reduce the list to 37 research priorities which achieved consensus (>75% 2-point agreement) and had high mean importance ratings (n = 116 participants) and (2) determine the most important priorities, barriers, and enablers (n = 90 participants). The top ten ranked research priorities for the overall sample and sub-groups (consumers, health professionals, and researchers) were identified. Priorities focused on: tumour biology, pre-clinical research, clinical and translational research, and supportive care. Variations were seen between sub-groups. The top ten barriers to conducting brain tumour research related to funding and resources, accessibility and awareness of research, collaboration, and process. The top ten research enablers were funding and resources, collaboration, and workforce. The broad list of research priorities identified by this Delphi study, together with how consumers, health professionals, and researchers prioritised items differently, and provides an evidence-based research agenda for brain tumour research that is needed across a wide range of areas.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17187729 and 11980052
Volume :
29
Issue :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Current Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.6cd87a96459d43ed8dda66d8c3a38599
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol29120781