Transitioning to adolescent and young adult or adult cancer survivorship care: A systematic review of contemporary guidelines and trials
Transitioning to adolescent and young adult or adult cancer survivorship care: A systematic review of contemporary guidelines and trials

Transitioning to adolescent and young adult or adult cancer survivorship care: A systematic review of contemporary guidelines and trials

Support Care Cancer. 2026 Apr 8;34(5):411. doi: 10.1007/s00520-026-10579-0.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Health service transitions of child, adolescent, and young adult cancer survivors between paediatric and adult cancer care services are pervasively fragmented, resulting in poor coordination, reduced satisfaction, and adverse outcomes for cancer survivors and significant others (e.g., caregivers and family members). Numerous trials and clinical guidelines have been developed to support care transitions, but their convergence, divergence, and methodological quality remain unclear. To advance clinical practice and quality research about care transitions, a synthesis of trials and guidelines on child, adolescent, and young adult care transition across age-appropriate cancer services is required to inform future research, practice, guideline, and policy development.

METHODS: A systematic review (CRD420251029796) was conducted. Studies were identified from searches of six bibliographic databases, four trial registers, and grey literature. Inclusion criteria focused on clinical guidelines or trials published between January 2020 and April 2025 that addressed age-related transitional cancer care.

RESULTS: A total of 3706 records were identified. After screening, 18 records met the inclusion criteria: 10 clinical guidelines, 4 completed trials, and 4 ongoing trials with registrations. While general recommendations between guidelines were consistent, they diverged in detail relating to their local contexts. Only two ongoing trials, and no completed studies, included independent control groups.

CONCLUSION: Completed trials were limited and highly variable in approach, components, and outcome measures, suggesting regionally specific guidelines enhance relevance, applicability, and transition practices. Future research should develop core outcome sets for care transition trials to facilitate comparison of outcomes and should develop robust study designs, including control groups.

PMID:41949619 | DOI:10.1007/s00520-026-10579-0