4.7 Article

Advancing Digital Health Innovation in Oncology: Priorities for High-Value Digital Transformation in Cancer Care

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
DOI: 10.2196/43404

Keywords

digital health; innovation; oncology; cancer care; cancer; patient journey; digital transformation; digital divide; health care delivery; service delivery; equity; patient-reported outcome; PROM; biomarker; digital innovation

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Although digital innovation is improving access and efficiency in healthcare, it has been lagging behind in oncology compared to other therapeutic areas. The lack of articulation of challenges and standardized infrastructure, along with a lack of support and incentives, have hindered the deployment of digital solutions in cancer care. A roundtable discussion brought together experts to address these issues and suggest actions to improve digital innovation in oncology.
Although health care delivery is becoming increasingly digitized, driven by the pursuit of improved access, equity, efficiency, and effectiveness, progress does not appear to be equally distributed across therapeutic areas. Oncology is renowned for leading innovation in research and in care; digital pathology, digital radiology, real-world data, next-generation sequencing, patient-reported outcomes, and precision approaches driven by complex data and biomarkers are hallmarks of the field. However, remote patient monitoring, decentralized approaches to care and research, hospital at home, and machine learning techniques have yet to be broadly deployed to improve cancer care. In response, the Digital Medicine Society and Moffitt Cancer Center convened a multistakeholder roundtable discussion to bring together leading experts in cancer care and digital innovation. This viewpoint highlights the findings from these discussions, in which experts agreed that digital innovation is lagging in oncology relative to other therapeutic areas. It reports that this lag is most likely attributed to poor articulation of the challenges in cancer care and research best suited to digital solutions, lack of incentives and support, and missing standardized infrastructure to implement digital innovations. It concludes with suggestions for actions needed to bring the promise of digitization to cancer care to improve lives.

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