1 Department of Radiology, NYU Langone Medical Center, 550 First Ave, New York, NY 10016.
2 Department of Population Health, NYU School of Medicine, New York, NY.
AJR Am J Roentgenol. 2018 Feb;210(2):369-375. doi: 10.2214/AJR.17.18485. Epub 2017 Nov 15.
The purpose of this study is to assess differences in patient distress, risk perception, and treatment preferences for incidental renal findings with descriptive versus combined descriptive and numeric graphical risk information.
A randomized survey study was conducted for adult patients about to undergo outpatient imaging studies at a large urban academic institution. Two survey arms contained either descriptive or a combination of descriptive and numeric graphical risk information about three hypothetical incidental renal findings at CT: 2-cm (low risk) and 5-cm (high risk) renal tumors and a 2-cm (low risk) renal artery aneurysm. The main outcomes were patient distress, perceived risk (qualitative and quantitative), treatment preference, and valuation of lesion discovery.
Of 374 patients, 299 participated (79.9% response rate). With inclusion of numeric and graphical, rather than only descriptive, risk information about disease progression for a 2-cm renal tumor, patients reported less worry (3.56 vs 4.12 on a 5-point scale; p < 0.001) and favored surgical consultation less often (29.3% vs 46.9%; p = 0.003). The proportion choosing surgical consultation for the 2-cm renal tumor decreased to a similar level as for the renal artery aneurysm with numeric risk information (29.3% [95% CI, 21.7-36.8%] and 27.9% [95% CI, 20.5-35.3%], respectively). Patients overestimated the absolute risk of adverse events regardless of risk information type, but significantly more so when given descriptive information only, and valued the discovery of lesions regardless of risk information type (range, 4.41-4.81 on a 5-point scale).
Numeric graphical risk communication for patients about incidental renal lesions may facilitate accurate risk comprehension and support patients in informed decision making.
本研究旨在评估描述性与描述性加数字图形风险信息对偶然发现的肾脏病变患者的痛苦程度、风险感知和治疗偏好的差异。
对一家大型城市学术机构即将接受门诊影像检查的成年患者进行了一项随机调查研究。两个调查组分别包含描述性或描述性加数字图形风险信息,涉及 CT 偶然发现的三个假设性肾脏病变:2cm(低风险)和 5cm(高风险)肾肿瘤和 2cm(低风险)肾动脉瘤。主要结果是患者的痛苦程度、感知的风险(定性和定量)、治疗偏好以及病变发现的价值。
在 374 名患者中,有 299 名患者参与(79.9%的应答率)。通过纳入关于 2cm 肾肿瘤疾病进展的数字和图形风险信息,而不是仅提供描述性信息,患者报告的担忧程度较低(5 分制为 3.56 分与 4.12 分;p<0.001),且不太倾向于选择手术咨询(29.3%与 46.9%;p=0.003)。对于 2cm 肾肿瘤,使用数字风险信息后,选择手术咨询的比例降至与肾动脉瘤相似的水平(分别为 29.3%[95%CI,21.7-36.8%]和 27.9%[95%CI,20.5-35.3%])。无论风险信息类型如何,患者都高估了不良事件的绝对风险,但仅提供描述性信息时高估程度更明显,且无论风险信息类型如何,患者都重视病变的发现(5 分制的评分范围为 4.41-4.81)。
对于偶然发现的肾脏病变患者,使用数字图形风险沟通可能有助于准确理解风险,并支持患者做出知情决策。