Penn Medicine at Lancaster General Health; Palliative Medicine Consultants, Lancaster, PA; Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN; and American Institutes for Research, Chapel Hill, NC.
J Oncol Pract. 2017 Sep;13(9):e800-e808. doi: 10.1200/JOP.2017.020982. Epub 2017 Jul 5.
Several studies have demonstrated that patients have a poor understanding of prognosis, survival, and effectiveness of chemotherapy, particularly in the setting of advanced cancer. This study examines oncology patients' understanding of their illness based on accurate reporting of stage at diagnosis and knowledge of cancer status (ie, free of cancer or in remission v active disease).
Two hundred eight patients with cancer previously treated at our large community-based cancer institute participated in the Consumer-Based Cancer Care Value Index field survey. Electronic medical record documentation of stage at diagnosis and cancer status was compared with patients' self-reported responses. Concordance of responses and variables influencing discordance were evaluated.
In 51.0% of patients, self-reported cancer stage matched the abstracted stage, with the highest concordance in patients with advanced cancer (72%) versus patients with stage I to III disease (36.4% to 61.5%). Unexpectedly, discordance was lower among patients with advanced cancer compared with patients with stage I to III cancer ( P = .0528). Patients who were concordant for cancer stage at diagnosis were significantly more likely to be female ( P = .001), be younger than age 65 years ( P = .01), have an income > $60,000 ( P = .03), and have more education ( P = .02). In 64.4% of patients, self-reported cancer status (ie, free of cancer or in remission v active disease) matched the abstracted status. Nearly 30% of patients were not sure about their status, even when they were free of cancer or in remission.
Our findings confirm that more than one quarter of patients with advanced cancer have poor illness understanding and highlight that an even greater number of patients with early stage I to III cancer have poor illness understanding. These observations highlight the need to improve illness understanding for patients across the entire cancer continuum.
多项研究表明,患者对预后、生存和化疗效果的理解较差,尤其是在晚期癌症患者中。本研究根据诊断时的准确分期和癌症状况(即无癌症或缓解期与活跃疾病),检查肿瘤患者对自身疾病的理解。
208 名曾在我们大型社区癌症研究所接受治疗的癌症患者参与了基于消费者的癌症护理价值指数现场调查。将电子病历中诊断时的分期和癌症状况与患者的自我报告进行比较。评估了应答的一致性以及影响不一致的变量。
在 51.0%的患者中,自我报告的癌症分期与提取的分期相符,晚期癌症患者的一致性最高(72%),而 I 期至 III 期癌症患者的一致性较低(36.4%至 61.5%)。出乎意料的是,与 I 期至 III 期癌症患者相比,晚期癌症患者的不一致性较低(P=0.0528)。诊断时癌症分期一致的患者更可能为女性(P=0.001),年龄小于 65 岁(P=0.01),收入超过 60,000 美元(P=0.03),教育程度更高(P=0.02)。在 64.4%的患者中,自我报告的癌症状况(即无癌症或缓解期与活跃疾病)与提取的状况相符。近 30%的患者对自己的状况不确定,即使他们没有癌症或处于缓解期。
我们的发现证实,超过四分之一的晚期癌症患者对疾病的认识较差,并强调有更多的 I 期至 III 期早期癌症患者对疾病的认识较差。这些观察结果突出表明,需要改善整个癌症患者的疾病认识。