DiscoverJCO Oncology Practice PodcastPatient-Centered Head and Neck Cancer Survivorship
Patient-Centered Head and Neck Cancer Survivorship

Patient-Centered Head and Neck Cancer Survivorship

Update: 2025-12-15
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Dr. Chino talks with Dr. Talya Salz, the first author of the JCO OP manuscript "Impact of an Electronic Patient-Reported Outcome–Informed Clinical Decision Support Tool on Clinical Discussions With Head and Neck Cancer Survivors: Findings From the HN-STAR Randomized Controlled Trial (WF-1805CD)" which was published earlier this year simultaneous to the ASCO Quality Care Symposium. Jeff White, the Director of PR and Strategic Communications for the American Society for Radiation Oncology, also joins the conversation to provide the patient advocate perspective.

TRANSCRIPT

Dr. Fumiko Chino: Hello, and welcome to Put into Practice, the podcast for the JCO Oncology Practice. I'm Dr. Fumiko Chino, an Associate Professor in Radiation Oncology at MD Anderson Cancer Center with a research focus on access, affordability, and equity.

Incidence of head and neck cancers is rising, primarily driven by HPV-positive oropharynx cancers, which are commonly diagnosed in younger people with overall excellent disease outcomes. Patient-centered cancer survivorship is a key evolving area of study, with the goal of improving quality of life after cancer treatment. This is particularly important for people in head and neck survivorship given large post-treatment symptom burden, including speech and swallowing problems, dry mouth and dental concerns, neck fibrosis, and pain.

I'm happy to welcome two guests today to discuss new research on how to improve communication in cancer survivorship. Dr. Talya Salz, PhD, is an Associated Attending Outcomes Research Scientist at Memorial Sloan Kettering. Her research aims to improve the quality of life for cancer survivors, focusing primarily on late effects after cancer treatment. She is the first author of the JCO OP manuscript "Impact of an Electronic Patient-Reported Outcome-Informed Clinical Decision Support Tool on Clinical Discussions With Head and Neck Cancer Survivors: Findings From the HN-STAR Randomized Control Trial." This publication was simultaneously presented with the 2025 ASCO Quality Care Symposium.

Mr. Jeff White is the Director of PR and Strategic Communications for ASTRO, the American Society for Radiation Oncology. He focuses on media outreach and manages ASTRO's social media channels in a way to expand knowledge and awareness about radiation oncology and its critical role in curing cancer. He was diagnosed and treated for an HPV-positive tonsillar cancer in 2023 and shared his story on RT Answers to help other patients understand the role of radiation, surgery, and chemotherapy in head and neck cancers.

Our full disclosures are available in the transcript of this episode, and we've already agreed to go by our first names for the podcast today.

Talya and Jeff, it's really great to speak to you.

Dr. Talya Salz: Thank you for having me.

Jeff White: Great to be here.

Dr. Fumiko Chino: Talya, do you mind starting us off on how you got interested in trying to improve survivorship care, and specifically what gaps your research can fill?

Dr. Talya Salz: My research is really shaped by my experiences trying to navigate the health care system. I had some health issues in my 20s, and as a recent college graduate in a new job with my brand new health insurance, I was really shocked at how hard it was for me to find doctors that I trusted. It was hard to communicate what I needed and to get insurance to cover my care. That experience really steered me toward a career that addressed reasons why patients, and we're all patients at some points in our lives, have difficulty getting care that's appropriate, that's needed, and that's patient-centered.

So when I started doing health services research in cancer almost 20 years ago now, there was a growing consensus that after cancer treatment is over, after patients are told there's no evidence of disease, that they're cured, there are so many more health issues that can arise that had historically been neglected. And late effects of cancer treatment can last long after treatment is over, or they can pop up months or years later. All the distress and anxiety from cancer, that doesn't just vanish once the treatment is complete.

One problem is that there's no agreement on who should manage late effects of cancer treatments after treatment is over. Survivors have fewer appointments with their oncology team, and these visits traditionally focus on monitoring for recurrences and new cancers. Many oncology providers feel that late effects of cancer are realistically difficult to manage in the brief post-treatment visits or that these issues are out of their purview. So survivors are typically expected to return to the primary care they were getting, or maybe they weren't even getting it, before their cancer. And a lot of research has shown that primary care providers feel ill-equipped to address all the health issues stemming from cancer and cancer treatments.

Cancer survivors can feel a real burden by this transition from oncology-focused care to more general preventive care. In my survivorship research, I hope to understand and improve how cancer survivors' long-term health issues are managed as they navigate from cancer-focused to ongoing survivorship care.

Dr. Fumiko Chino: What a great and thorough answer to that question. I love the idea that you took the kernel of your own experience and then translated that into an entire career to try to improve the lived experience of cancer survivorship and outlined so many key friction points that survivors really face when they transition into this long, hopefully, road of survivorship.

Jeff, I think I've known you since the entirety of the eight years you've been at ASTRO, and I immediately thought of you as the perfect guest for this podcast focused on improving head and neck survivorship communication, as you are a communication specialist. Do you mind speaking a little bit about your role within radiation oncology and then how this became both the best and the worst background to have when you were yourself diagnosed with cancer?

Jeff White: Sure. Yeah, as you mentioned at the intro, I've been with ASTRO for about eight years and was brought in to kind of elevate the specialty as much as possible, either through media relations, social media, and partnerships and other things like that. When I came to ASTRO, a lot of people were saying to me like, "Wow,

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Patient-Centered Head and Neck Cancer Survivorship

Patient-Centered Head and Neck Cancer Survivorship