Tag: diagnosis

  • Romania and the fight against cancer

    Romania and the fight against cancer

    In February 2021, the European Commission
    launched Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan, whereby it allotted €4 billion to fund
    cancer prevention, research and treatment programs across the EU. Shortly
    afterwards, Romanian authorities starting transposing this plan into national
    law. Last month saw the launch of Romania’s National Anti-Cancer Plan, which
    first and foremost lays out the standard protocol cancer patients must observe,
    from the first signs of the disease until the completion of therapy. Moreover,
    the plan is based on a multidisciplinary approach: cancer patients can seek
    treatment from a team of specialists. This extended approach, involving
    prevention, screening, diagnosis, treatment and palliative care, also involving
    recovery and reintegration, entails a strategy that only a multidisciplinary
    team can elaborate and provide to the patient. Finally, the plan brings to the
    fore innovation, research and patient-oriented medicine, as Diana Păun, a
    presidential healthcare advisor, has told Radio Romania.


    The plan was patterned on the European
    plan itself, there are clear deadlines for every objective. There are 11
    objectives in total, with specific goals for specific types of cancer that we
    have factored in, namely those forms that are most frequent in Romania:
    colorectal cancer, breast cancer and cervical cancer for women, lung cancer and
    prostate cancer for men, but also leukemia and childhood cancer. There are
    specific deadline-related goals spanning until 2026. Of course, we want to
    implement some goals before that, for instance national screening programs for
    certain types of cancer such as breast, lung or colorectal cancer are supposed
    by finalize by January 1, 2023. A National Cancer Register, an important and
    necessary measure, is expected to be up and running by 2024, and by 2026 we
    plan on creating a healthcare innovation fund, with multiple financing sources,
    that should provide Romanian patients with quick access to new therapies in due
    time.


    Due to system-wide underfunding, access to
    new drugs is very difficult for Romanian patients compared to elsewhere in
    Europe, which is why the plan also seeks to provide Romanian patients with
    quick access to new drugs and state-of-the-art screening methods, Diana Păun
    says.


    A central element in the new plan is the
    focus on medical innovation and research and on digital solutions. The pandemic
    has taught us to resort to these means in order to communicate and benefit from
    all the findings of research. The plan has a clear objective that must be
    implemented by 2023: to come up with criteria that should allow for
    reimbursements of genetic testing, which is the latest medical breakthrough in
    this field, genetic cancer markers that can predict the risk that a certain
    individual develops a specific type of cancer. And if we know in advance what
    type of cancer to expect in certain individuals, we can prevent the disease or,
    if the disease is already active, prescribe better-targeted and patient-oriented
    treatments that should generate less adverse reactions and increase chances of
    recovery.


    Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan will divide
    its billion-euro funds to each member state depending on projects established
    at national level. The Plan allows for great financial opportunity, Diana Păun
    argues, and hopefully researches, physicians, hospital managers and
    institutions in Romania will try to access these funds, based on a strategic
    concept that experts have already provided. Europe’s Beating Cancer Plan, which
    was used as a model for Romania’s own plan, provides four main pillars with
    separate funding. The first refers to prevention, namely raising public
    awareness and accountability with respect to healthy living: avoiding smoking,
    alcohol abuse, healthy eating, preventing pollution. The second pillar has to
    do with screening, namely early diagnosis. Right now, Romania has a single
    cancer screening program for colorectal cancer, although there are numerous
    types of cancer such as breast cancer or lung cancer that require screening
    programs. A third pillar refers to diagnosis using state-of-the-art methods and
    innovative treatments. The last pillar refers to access to palliative care, an
    aspect that has been neglected for a long time in Romania. According to
    official data, some 2.7 million cases of cancer and 1.3 million related
    fatalities were reported in Europe in 2020. In Romania, figures speak of
    approximately 99 thousand new cases and over 54 thousand cancer-related deaths.
    (VP)