Sommers Benjamin D, Beard Clair J, D'Amico Anthony V, Kaplan Irving, Richie Jerome P, Zeckhauser Richard J
Division of General Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Cancer. 2008 Oct 15;113(8):2058-67. doi: 10.1002/cncr.23807.
Little is known regarding how patients select treatment for localized prostate cancer. This study examined determinants of patients' preferences for health states related to prostate cancer, and assessed whether preferences and/or other factors predict treatment choices.
A survey of 167 patients with newly diagnosed localized prostate cancer was conducted in 4 academic medical practices from 2004 to 2007. The authors assessed demographic and health factors, and used a time-tradeoff method to elicit preferences in the form of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) regarding health states related to prostate cancer. Linear regressions identified predictors of preferences (in QALYs) for erectile dysfunction (ED), urinary incontinence, rectal/bowel symptoms, and metastatic prostate cancer. Linear probability models identified predictors of treatment choice.
Patient preferences were affected by a range of behavioral, demographic, and health factors. For example, sexually active men reported significantly lower QALYs for living with ED, and men with family members who died of cancer reported lower QALYs for metastatic disease. The strongest predictor of treatment was the type of physician seen (radiation oncology vs urology) at the time of the survey. Age and tumor grade also were found to be strongly predictive of treatment. In general, QALYs were not found to predict treatment choice.
Patient preferences, as reported in QALYs, are shaped by reasonable behavioral and demographic influences. However, actual treatment choices appear to bear little relation to these patient preferences, and instead demonstrate a strong association with clinician specialty. More attention to variation in preferences among patients, as well as the use of decision-support technologies, may enable physicians to facilitate more optimal individualized treatment choices for patients with prostate cancer.
关于患者如何选择局限性前列腺癌的治疗方法,目前所知甚少。本研究调查了患者对前列腺癌相关健康状态的偏好的决定因素,并评估了偏好和/或其他因素是否能预测治疗选择。
2004年至2007年期间,在4家学术医疗中心对167例新诊断的局限性前列腺癌患者进行了一项调查。作者评估了人口统计学和健康因素,并采用时间权衡法以质量调整生命年(QALY)的形式得出患者对前列腺癌相关健康状态的偏好。线性回归确定了勃起功能障碍(ED)、尿失禁、直肠/肠道症状和转移性前列腺癌的偏好(以QALY表示)的预测因素。线性概率模型确定了治疗选择的预测因素。
患者的偏好受到一系列行为、人口统计学和健康因素的影响。例如,性活跃的男性报告称,患有ED的生活质量调整生命年显著较低,而有家庭成员死于癌症的男性报告称,转移性疾病的生活质量调整生命年较低。治疗的最强预测因素是调查时所看医生的类型(放射肿瘤学与泌尿外科)。年龄和肿瘤分级也被发现对治疗有很强的预测作用。总体而言,未发现生活质量调整生命年能预测治疗选择。
以质量调整生命年报告的患者偏好受到合理的行为和人口统计学影响。然而,实际的治疗选择似乎与这些患者偏好关系不大,反而与临床医生的专业密切相关。更多地关注患者偏好的差异以及使用决策支持技术,可能会使医生为前列腺癌患者做出更优化的个性化治疗选择。