Pathak Swati, George Nerissa, Monti Denise, Robinson Kathy, Politi Mary C
Division of Hematology-Oncology, Department of Internal Medicine, SIU School of Medicine, Springfield, IL, USA.
Simmons Cancer Institute, 315, West Carpenter Street, Springfield, IL, 62702, USA.
J Cancer Educ. 2019 Aug;34(4):803-809. doi: 10.1007/s13187-018-1377-x.
Rural-residing cancer patients often do not participate in clinical trials. Many patients misunderstand cancer clinical trials and their rights as participant. The purpose of this study is to modify a previously developed cancer clinical trials decision aid (DA), incorporating the unique needs of rural populations, and test its impact on knowledge and decision outcomes. The study was conducted in two phases. Phase I recruited 15 rural-residing cancer survivors in a qualitative usability study. Participants navigated the original DA and provided feedback regarding usability and implementation in rural settings. Phase II recruited 31 newly diagnosed rural-residing cancer patients. Patients completed a survey before and after using the revised DA, R-CHOICES. Primary outcomes included decisional conflict, decision self-efficacy, knowledge, communication self-efficacy, and attitudes towards and willingness to consider joining a trial. In phase I, the DA was viewed positively by rural-residing cancer survivors. Participants provided important feedback about factors rural-residing patients consider when thinking about trial participation. In phase II, after using R-CHOICES, participants had higher certainty about their choice (mean post-test = 3.10 vs. pre-test = 2.67; P = 0.025) and higher trial knowledge (mean percentage correct at post-test = 73.58 vs. pre-test = 57.77; P < 0.001). There was no significant change in decision self-efficacy, communication self-efficacy, and attitudes towards or willingness to join trials. The R-CHOICES improved rural-residing patients' knowledge of cancer clinical trials and reduced conflict about making a trial decision. More research is needed on ways to further support decisions about trial participation among this population.
居住在农村的癌症患者通常不参与临床试验。许多患者误解了癌症临床试验以及他们作为参与者的权利。本研究的目的是修改先前开发的癌症临床试验决策辅助工具(DA),纳入农村人群的独特需求,并测试其对知识和决策结果的影响。该研究分两个阶段进行。第一阶段在一项定性可用性研究中招募了15名居住在农村的癌症幸存者。参与者浏览了原始的DA,并就其在农村环境中的可用性和实施提供了反馈。第二阶段招募了31名新诊断的居住在农村的癌症患者。患者在使用修订后的DA(R - CHOICES)之前和之后完成了一项调查。主要结果包括决策冲突、决策自我效能感、知识、沟通自我效能感以及对参与试验的态度和意愿。在第一阶段,居住在农村的癌症幸存者对DA给予了积极评价。参与者提供了关于居住在农村的患者在考虑参与试验时所考虑因素的重要反馈。在第二阶段,使用R - CHOICES后,参与者对自己的选择有了更高的确定性(测试后均值 = 3.10,测试前均值 = 2.67;P = 0.025),并且试验知识更高(测试后正确百分比均值 = 73.58,测试前均值 = 57.77;P < 0.001)。决策自我效能感、沟通自我效能感以及对参与试验的态度或意愿没有显著变化。R - CHOICES提高了居住在农村的患者对癌症临床试验的知识,并减少了做出试验决策时的冲突。需要更多关于进一步支持该人群试验参与决策方法的研究。