Successful twinning initiatives have been reported in childhood leukemia. Pediatric neuro-oncology requires a complex multidisciplinary approach and the feasibility of similar twinning programs is unknown. Twinning between King Hussein Cancer Center in Amman and the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto started with e-mail communications, and subsequently included monthly videoconferences and exchanges between institutions. The outcome of 35 newly diagnosed medulloblastoma patients (22 high-risk and 13 average-risk) treated during this period is reported. The 3-year overall survival for average risk and high-risk patients was 100 and 81%, respectively. This experience suggests that twinning may facilitate the implementation of multidisciplinary neurooncology programs in low-income countries. Videoconferencing allows interactive exchanges with a significant learning impact. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Qaddoumi, I., Musharbash, A., Elayyan, M., Mansour, A., Al-Hussaini, M., Drake, J., … Bouffet, E. (2008). Closing the survival gap: Implementation of medulloblastoma protocols in a low-income country through a twinning program. International Journal of Cancer, 122(6), 1203–1206. https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.23160
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