Choosing Wisely India (CWI) is an initiative to identify low-value and/or potentially harmful practices in cancer care in India. Modelled after Choosing Wisely in the USA and Canada [1,2,3], the CWI project was intended to facilitate a conversation between patients, clinicians, hospitals and policy-makers on delivering high-quality, affordable cancer care. By identifying common low-value and/or harmful practices, this process aims to reduce unnecessary interventions to improve overall quality of care, reduce patient toxicity and reduce the financial burden on both the patient and system. The formal CWI report has been recently published in Lancet Oncology [4]; in this commentary, we provide a summary of the process, describe the Top 10 CWI list and offer suggestions for future actions to improve the delivery of high-quality cancer in India’s cancer system.

The National Cancer Grid (NCG) was established in 2012 and now includes 171 cancer centres, research institutes, patient advocacy groups, charitable organizations and professional societies. The NCG coordinates national efforts related to cancer control, research and education. A key initiative of the NCG has been the creation of context-specific clinical practice guidelines for common cancers, the goal of which is to standardize and improve the quality of care delivered [5]. In a parallel project, the NCG undertook Choosing Wisely India to identify and eventually reduce utilization of interventions which do not offer meaningful benefit to patients. The high proportion of out-of-pocket spending among Indian cancer patients makes this highly relevant in a system where a substantial proportion of patients incur catastrophic health expenditures [6]. The Choosing Wisely initiative has been adopted globally by more than 20 countries as a disease specific process to identify unnecessary (often expensive) interventions that should be avoided [7]. Within the USA and Canada, there are now over 800 Choosing Wisely recommendations from more than 120 national societies covering a range of diseases [8, 9]. Choosing Wisely initiatives focused on cancer have been published in the USA and Canada [1,2,3]. Choosing Wisely India represents the first Choosing Wisely initiative within any disease area from a low-middle income country and represents an important step on the path to Universal Health Coverage and the achievement of health Sustainable Development Goals.

In 2017, the NCG convened a nine-member Choosing Wisely India Task Force including two members from national patient advocacy organizations and seven physician members from radiation, medical and surgical oncology. This membership included executive office-bearers from Indian Society of Oncology (ISO), Association of Radiation Oncologists of India (AROI), Indian Association of Surgical Oncology (IASO) and Indian Society of Medical and Pediatric Oncology (ISMPO) and the convener of the NCG. Each specialty had at least one representative from each of the public and private health systems. Additional methodologic expertise was provided by three non-voting advisors from Canada and the UK with experience in Choosing Wisely Canada and global cancer policy.

A long list of cancer practices to be considered was collated from clinical members of the NCG, four professional societies and members of the CWI Task Force, with reference to the existing Choosing Wisely USA and Canada lists. The following prioritizing factors were considered in both creating the long list and the subsequent voting process to identify the final Top 10 list: evidence of low value/harm, frequent use in India, cost (including opportunity cost), be practically feasible and measureable, and relevance to the Indian cancer context. Consensus was achieved using a modified Delphi process [10]. The CWI Task Force consensus voted on the long list and shorter list to identify the final Top 10 list. Membership of the NCG and the four professional societies were given the opportunity to provide input on each of the long list and final list. This final list was reviewed and endorsed by the Executive Boards of the four professional societies and the NCG. The final list consisted of 10 recommendations (available free for download on https://www.thelancet.com/action/showPdf?pii=S1470-2045%2819%2930092-0). Of the 10 practices, four practices were new suggestions and six practices were adapted with modifications from Choosing Wisely USA and Canada lists.

The Choosing Wisely India initiative will contribute to ongoing policy dialogue within and between clinical and patient communities in India’s cancer system. Many of the items included in the final list represent recommendations to avoid interventions that offer no benefit to patients and are associated with significant side effects and/or financial costs. The Task Force was careful to ensure that while similar lists from other countries (e.g., Canada and the USA) were not ignored, India-specific recommendations were also considered and included in the final list; by no means does this imply that the original Choosing Wisely lists from the USA and Canada were not relevant in India—it merely indicates that there were other points which were considered higher priority for India. The Task Force also was conscious of the fact that while some of these recommendations were aspirational and would require systemic changes in healthcare delivery (i.e., multidisciplinary input for all patients with curable cancer, delivery of care closer to home), many of them could also be immediate and short-term targets to achieve (e.g., do not order PET CT scans to monitor response to palliative chemotherapy).

The dual creation of the NCG clinical practice guidelines with the Choosing Wisely List represent initial steps in a multi-pronged process to improve the quality, equity and affordability of cancer care in India [6, 7]. At the 2019 NCG annual meeting, there was resounding support to begin multi-centre data collection to measure compliance with both clinical practice guidelines and the CWI recommendations. The international Choosing Wisely programme emphasizes that costs of care should not be a factor in finalizing the recommendations; however, in countries like India and other low-middle income countries (LMICs), these recommendations also serve to demonstrate more optimal ways of deploying scarce resources and maximize public health benefit. The Choosing Wisely recommendations for cancer care in India are also the first ever list (in any healthcare domain) developed and published from an LMIC and also the first to include patient representatives in the Task Force. These recommendations could well be an exemplar for other countries or geographical regions to follow.