DOI: 10.3390/curroncol33070395 ISSN: 1718-7729

A Scoping Review of Implemented Innovations in Cancer Care: Implications for Pan-Canadian Scaling

Tara Sampalli, Gail Tomblin Murphy, Stuart Peacock, Sri Navaratnam, Danielle Domm, Kristi MacKenzie

The Canadian cancer care landscape faces rising cancer incidence, persistent inequities, and increasing system pressures. Led by the Canadian Association of Provincial Cancer Agencies (CAPCA), this scoping review applied an implementation science lens to evaluate the scalability of innovative cancer care models across Canada. Using a mixed-methods design, innovations were identified through a scoping review (n = 42), grey literature analysis (>50), a pan-Canadian survey (n = 72), and key informant interviews (n = 24). Guided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), this review assessed feasibility, barriers, and facilitators influencing adoption and scale-up of identified innovations. Results revealed widespread adoption across various domains including virtual oncology, artificial intelligence (AI)-driven tools, and expansion of team-based care. At-home models, including home infusion, palliative care, and pharmacist-led chronic disease clinics, demonstrated improved access, patient satisfaction, and reduced hospital burden. CFIR mapping revealed cross-cutting facilitators including strong stakeholder engagement, structured training, and demonstrated patient benefits. However, persistent barriers include regulatory variability, funding instability, digital infrastructure gaps, and workforce capacity constraints. This paper highlights implemented innovations in cancer care and identifies strategic scaling opportunities needed to ensure all people living in Canada benefit from high-quality, person-centred equitable cancer care.

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