Markman Maurie, Petersen Judith, Montgomery Robert
University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
Cancer. 2006 Aug 15;107(4):849-53. doi: 10.1002/cncr.21997.
There is limited information available regarding the reasons cancer patients decide to enter clinical trials. To explore this issue, aggregate responses to the question, "Are you interested in learning about clinical trials for your condition?" obtained from >115,000 cancer patients (or their families) who entered data into 1 of several proprietary decision-support programs embedded within approximately 100 well-established cancer-related Internet sites were analyzed. The percentage of patients (or their families) who expressed interest in learning about clinical trials ranged from as low as 21% (endometrial and cervix cancer patients >80 years of age; n=178) to as high as 85% (recurrent ovarian cancer patients, age 51-60; n=842). Patients >80 years of age, regardless of sex, tumor type, or status of disease, were considerably less likely to be interested in clinical trial information than younger individuals. Whereas there were no differences between males and females in their desire to obtain information, patients with self-declared more "serious conditions" (e.g., metastatic breast cancer, recurrent prostate cancer), and those with specific cancers having a widely recognized poor prognosis (e.g., nonsmall cell lung cancer), were more likely to request study information. In the current evaluation of a large database of individuals who elected to participate in 1 of several cancer-related decision-support programs, major differences in self-expressed interest in obtaining information regarding clinical trials was observed. Particularly notable was the reduced desire to gather such information among the very elderly, and the increased interest by patients with the most serious cancer-related conditions.
关于癌症患者决定参加临床试验的原因,可获取的信息有限。为探究这一问题,我们分析了对“您是否有兴趣了解针对您病情的临床试验?”这一问题的汇总回答,这些回答来自超过115,000名癌症患者(或其家属),他们向大约100个成熟的癌症相关互联网网站中嵌入的几个专有决策支持程序之一输入了数据。表示有兴趣了解临床试验的患者(或其家属)比例低至21%(80岁以上的子宫内膜癌和宫颈癌患者;n = 178),高至85%(51 - 60岁的复发性卵巢癌患者;n = 842)。80岁以上的患者,无论性别、肿瘤类型或疾病状况如何,对临床试验信息感兴趣的可能性都比年轻人低得多。虽然男性和女性获取信息的意愿没有差异,但自称病情更“严重”的患者(如转移性乳腺癌、复发性前列腺癌),以及那些患有公认预后较差的特定癌症的患者(如非小细胞肺癌),更有可能请求获取研究信息。在当前对一个选择参与几个癌症相关决策支持程序之一的大型个人数据库的评估中,观察到在自我表达的对获取临床试验信息的兴趣方面存在重大差异。特别值得注意的是,高龄者收集此类信息的意愿降低,而患有最严重癌症相关疾病的患者兴趣增加。