Division of General Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA,
Patient. 2014;7(4):427-36. doi: 10.1007/s40271-014-0066-z.
Understanding the experiences of men leaving active surveillance programs is critical to making such programs viable for men with localized prostate cancer.
To generate hypotheses about the factors that influence patients' decisions to leave an active surveillance program.
Using data from the Johns Hopkins active surveillance cohort, bivariate analyses and multinomial regression models examined characteristics of men who self-elected to leave, those who stayed in the program, and those who left because of disease reclassification. We interviewed patients who self-elected to leave.
Of 1,159 men in active surveillance, 9 % self-elected to leave. In interviews with a sample of 14 men who self-elected to leave, uncertainty involved in active surveillance participation, existence of personal criteria-distinct from providers' clinical criteria-and fear of cancer were important factors in decisions to leave.
Men leaving active surveillance were motivated by a number of factors, including patient-defined criteria, which might differ from clinical recommendations. To ensure active surveillance participation, it may be important to address cancer-related anxiety and personal criteria underlying patient decisions.
了解男性退出主动监测计划的经历对于使这些计划对患有局限性前列腺癌的男性具有可行性至关重要。
提出影响患者决定退出主动监测计划的因素的假设。
利用约翰霍普金斯主动监测队列的数据,进行了单变量分析和多项回归模型,以研究自行选择退出、继续留在该计划以及因疾病重新分类而退出的男性的特征。我们对自行选择退出的患者进行了访谈。
在 1159 名接受主动监测的男性中,有 9%自行选择退出。在对 14 名自行选择退出的男性进行的访谈中,主动监测参与过程中的不确定性、存在与提供者临床标准不同的个人标准以及对癌症的恐惧是决定退出的重要因素。
退出主动监测的男性受到多种因素的驱动,包括患者定义的标准,这些标准可能与临床建议不同。为了确保主动监测的参与,解决与癌症相关的焦虑和患者决策背后的个人标准可能很重要。