Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

National cancer grid takes off from Jhajjar

- Sanchita Sharma

IT IS 1ST AMONG HIGH-END HOSPITALS BEING DEVELOPED TO OFFER AFFORDABLE AND QUALITY CANCER TREATMENT AT THE DISTRICT LEVEL

NEW DELHI: The National Cancer Institute (NCI) in the Jhajjar district of Haryana is the first in a nationwide grid of high-end public hospitals being developed to offer affordable and quality cancer treatment at the district level.

There were an estimated 1,069,000 new cases of cancer in 2016, with cancers accounting for 8.3% of the total deaths, according to India State-level Disease Burden Initiative published in The Lancet in 2018. “Our vision is to develop a national cancer grid in the public sector with NCI as the hub. It will be connected to centres across the country, at the district level and in small, tier-3 cities, where you will have a good centre, doctors trained to administer chemothera­py and radiothera­py following national treatment protocols — all at subsidised rates,” said Dr Randeep Guleria, director, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), which has establishe­d the country’s biggest cancer hospital over 65 acres in Badsa in Jhajjar.

The 710-bed NCI, which has been set up at a cost of R2,035 crore, will focus on patient care, undergradu­ate teaching, research, and training specialist­s to provide cancer treatment in small towns, which will be networked with NCI to provide the best treatment modalities.

“The Tata Trust is supporting a national cancer grid, but my challenge in this is to make it cost effective,” said Dr Guleria. Patients who go to NCI will be given a treatment protocol to follow and referred to the grid hospital nearest to their home for chemothera­py and management. “They don’t have to come for every cycle of chemothera­py; they can come back after threesix months for a follow-up. Patients will be treated nearer to home, they will have better quality of life, and there will be a distributi­on of the [patient treatment] load,” he added.

Electronic medical records at NCI and the cancer grid will generate an immense amount of data from across the country for medical research. “Globally, robust and validated data is very important and if we have good electronic medical records, as we will in Jhajjar and at the cancer grid hospitals, we have huge data,” Dr Guleria said.

This big data is invaluable, he explained. “We have many people approachin­g us . One example is radiology. If someone has an algorithm to screen a chest CT and pick up an abnormalit­y, they need to run it though a large number of scans to validate. They need a hospital like AIIMS where CTS are done in bulk. Running the software through chest CTS radiologis­ts have already classified as normal/abnormal can validate the algorithm’s accuracy,” said Dr Guleria.

India has begun screening for oral, breast and cervical cancers, which account for 34% of all cancers, in select districts . With medical advances making it possible to treat many cancers — 80% of childhood cancers are treatable, breast cancer is curable if diagnosed early — treatment at the district level will be a gamechange­r, say experts. “There is need for higher level treatment facilities, but it must be integrated with robust preventive health programme, early diagnosis and treatment,” said Dr K Srinath Reddy, president, Public Health Foundation of India.

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