Bridging gaps throughout a patient’s journey with melanoma: A systematic review
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Background
Melanoma is one of the most fatal skin cancers, with rising incidence and mortality worldwide. From diagnosis to treatment, patient experiences often involve anxiety, symptom burden, and limited access to information which profoundly impacts the quality of overall patient outcomes.
Objective
This systematic review aims to identify and analyze major barriers melanoma patients face throughout their healthcare journey.
Methods
Per PRISMA guidelines, studies were identified from PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Embase, and Cochrane Library, supplemented by manual hand-searching. Eligible studies focused on the experiences of melanoma patients within Western healthcare systems, addressed knowledge gaps and barriers to care throughout the patient journey, and were published in English between 2013 and 2023. Screening and extraction were conducted independently and in duplicate. Findings were synthesized based on identified themes. The methodological quality of the included studies was assessed using the GRADE criteria.
Results
Out of 2,257 screened articles, 183 met the inclusion criteria. Studies were categorized into four major themes: intersectionality, treatment, diagnosis/prognosis, and patient/societal burden. Commonly explored subcategories included self-examination, risk factors, and drug efficacy. This focus was driven by the emergence of novel self-examination interventions and knowledge gaps regarding risk factors and prognosis, particularly in relation to newly introduced immune checkpoint inhibitors and targeted therapies.
Conclusions
Melanoma patients experience significant gaps throughout their healthcare journey. Identifying areas of improvement in current practices is the first step toward developing targeted solutions that improve the patient experience and quality of life.