Visual analysis of pharmacoeconomic research progress on nutrition therapy for cancer patients
10.3760/cma.j.cn115822-20231012-00046
- VernacularTitle:肿瘤患者营养支持治疗的药物经济学研究进展可视化分析
- Author:
Ting CHEN
1
;
Ruixiang XIE
;
Yueling WANG
;
Lin YANG
Author Information
1. 福建医科大学肿瘤临床医学院 福建省肿瘤医院药剂科,福州 350014
- Keywords:
Cancer;
Nutrition;
Pharmacoeconomics;
CiteSpace;
VOS viewer
- From:
Chinese Journal of Clinical Nutrition
2024;32(5):298-305
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:The purpose of this study was to analyze the pharmacoeconomic research progress on nutrition therapy for cancer patients in recent ten years and explore the research hotspots in this field.Method:Bibliometric analysis was conducted based on Web of Science core database using CiteSpace, VOSviewer, Gephi and Scimago Graphics.Results:A total of 647 researches in the field of pharmacoeconomics about nutrition therapy for cancer patients published from 2013 to 2022 were included, with the annual publication output peaking in 2022. A total of 286 authors from 94 countries or regions have conducted relevant research. Among the 306 institutions involved in our study, the World Health Organization was with the most citations, and the journal with the most citations was Clinical nutrition. The United States, China and the United Kingdom were the top three countries concerning publication outputs. Harvard University was the most important research institution in this field, and the authors with the highest publication volume was Carli Francesco. Keyword analysis identified colorectal cancer as the most important research topic. Keyword clustering resulted in 16 groups, among which enteral nutrition was the largest, and the burst keyword was enhanced recovery after surgery. Conclusions:This study found that research hotspots in nutrition therapy for cancer patients have mainly focused on colorectal cancer and enhanced recovery after surgery in the past decade, and enteral nutrition is also an important research topic in this field. With the emerging precision medicine, based on big data and individual patient conditions (especially patients with colorectal cancer), tailored whole-course perioperative nutrition management program with superior cost-effectiveness may represent the future research trend.