University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Wisconsin Surgical Outcomes Research Program, Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Thyroid. 2020 May;30(5):696-703. doi: 10.1089/thy.2019.0587. Epub 2020 Feb 7.
The optimal management for patients with small, low-risk thyroid cancer is often debated. We aimed to characterize the attitudes and beliefs of providers and patients about management of small, low-risk thyroid cancer and how they relate to overtreatment. We conducted 34 semi-structured interviews with surgeons ( = 12), endocrinologists ( = 12), and patients with <1.5 cm papillary thyroid cancer ( = 10). Interviews probed about diagnosis and treatment decision-making, including nonoperative options. We used thematic analysis to identify themes related to overtreatment and created concept diagrams to map observed relationships between themes. When providers discussed management of small, low-risk thyroid cancer, most felt that overtreatment was a problem, and some brought it up without prompting. Providers often believed that overtreatment results from overdiagnosis and relayed how the process commonly starts with incidental discovery of a thyroid nodule on imaging. Providers viewed biopsy of the nodule as a reflexive or habitual action. They ascribed inappropriate biopsy to lack of adherence to or knowledge of guidelines, radiologist recommendations, and the desire of patients and physicians to minimize diagnostic uncertainty. Providers described subsequent cancer diagnosis as an event that "opens Pandora's box" and often provokes a strong instinctive, culturally rooted need to proceed with surgery-specifically total thyroidectomy. Consequently, most providers felt that it is easier to prevent overdiagnosis than overtreatment and recommended strategies such as improving guideline adherence, resetting patients' expectations, and engaging the media. In contrast, patients did not bring up or openly discuss overtreatment or overdiagnosis. Some patients described the seemingly automatic process from an incidental finding to surgery. Their statements confirmed that the "need to know" was a major motivation for biopsying their nodule. Patients felt that once they had a cancer diagnosis, surgery was a foregone conclusion. Patients admitted their knowledge about thyroid nodules and cancer was low, leaving room for education about the need for biopsy and less extensive treatment options. Surgeons' and endocrinologists' attitudes and beliefs about overtreatment focus on the automaticity of overdiagnosis. Both patients and providers are cognizant of the cascade of clinical events that propel patients from incidental discovery of a thyroid nodule to surgery.
对于患有小且低风险甲状腺癌的患者,其最佳管理方案常常存在争议。本研究旨在描述临床医生(外科医生:12 名,内分泌医生:12 名)和患有直径<1.5cm 甲状腺乳头状癌患者(10 名)对小且低风险甲状腺癌管理的态度和信念,以及这些态度和信念如何与过度治疗相关。我们对 34 名参与者(外科医生 12 名,内分泌医生 12 名,直径<1.5cm 甲状腺乳头状癌患者 10 名)进行了半结构化访谈,内容涉及诊断和治疗决策,包括非手术选择。我们采用主题分析法确定与过度治疗相关的主题,并创建概念图以绘制观察到的主题之间的关系。当临床医生讨论小且低风险甲状腺癌的管理时,大多数人认为过度治疗是一个问题,有些人甚至在没有提示的情况下提及该问题。临床医生通常认为过度治疗是由过度诊断引起的,并描述了过度诊断通常是如何从影像学偶然发现甲状腺结节开始的。临床医生将结节活检视为一种反射性或习惯性的行为。他们将不适当的活检归因于缺乏对指南、放射科医生建议的遵循或了解,以及患者和医生最小化诊断不确定性的愿望。临床医生描述了随后的癌症诊断是一个“打开潘多拉魔盒”的事件,这常常强烈地引发一种基于文化的本能需要,即进行手术治疗,特别是全甲状腺切除术。因此,大多数临床医生认为,预防过度诊断比预防过度治疗更容易,建议采取一些策略,如提高对指南的遵循,重置患者的期望,并利用媒体。相比之下,患者没有提出或公开讨论过度治疗或过度诊断。一些患者描述了从偶然发现到手术的看似自动的过程。他们的陈述证实,“了解病情”是对他们的结节进行活检的主要动机。患者认为,一旦他们被诊断出患有癌症,手术就是必然的结果。患者承认他们对甲状腺结节和癌症的了解有限,这为有关活检和更广泛治疗选择的教育留出了空间。外科医生和内分泌医生对过度治疗的态度和信念集中在过度诊断的自动性上。患者和临床医生都意识到一系列推动患者从偶然发现甲状腺结节到手术的临床事件。