Abstract
Purpose: A previous survey conducted in 2012 showed that 82% of radiation oncology residents felt they were not receiving optimal brachytherapy training. With almost 10 years of hindsight, the aim was to update these results. Material and methods: An anonymized questionnaire based on the 2012 survey was submitted to the 161 French residents enrolled in the 2021 French Society of Young Radiation Oncologists (Société Française des Jeunes Radiothérapeutes Oncologues – SFJRO) national brachytherapy courses. Results: With a participation rate of 73%, 86% of the residents were interested in brachytherapy, but 80% consider their training in brachytherapy insufficient. 88% and 69% of the residents stated that they knew gynecological and prostate brachytherapy indications correctly, respectively. The residents have achieved proficiency in the technique of brachytherapy of vaginal vault in 36% (compared with 21% in 2012), utero-vaginal in 13% (12% in 2012), including 4% with interstitial implants, and prostate in only 4% (4% in 2012). In their brachytherapy internships, 18% of the residents declared having no role or an observational role. The main obstacles to training were the need to go to several centers to see several indications (85%), lack of brachytherapy activity in the center (72%), and the difficulty of freeing themselves from hospital duties (71%). Conclusions: With results globally stable compared with 2012, brachytherapy training needs improvement. In the absence of a mandatory internship in a reference center or dedicated fellowships, residents must have protected access to training sites by favoring inter-hospital exchanges.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Kissel, M., Ollivier, L., Fumagalli, I., Pommier, P., Chargari, C., Blanchard, P., … Hannoun-Levi, J. M. (2022). Resident training in brachytherapy in France: A 10-year update after the first survey of SFJRO members. Journal of Contemporary Brachytherapy, 14(6), 501–511. https://doi.org/10.5114/jcb.2022.123969
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.