ReD Associates, 26 Broadway Ste. 2505, New York, NY, 10004, USA.
Worldwide Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Bristol-Myers Squibb, 3401 Princeton Pike, Lawrenceville, NJ, USA.
J Cancer Surviv. 2020 Jun;14(3):363-376. doi: 10.1007/s11764-020-00853-3. Epub 2020 Jan 16.
The aim of this study was to examine what personally mattered to 24 patients who received immuno-oncology (IO) therapy for stage IV non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), as well as their families and friends, to understand how they evaluated their cancer treatments and the determinants of the quality of life (QoL) of long-term survivors.
Ethnographic research was conducted with 24 patients who had responded to IO (pembrolizumab, nivolumab, atezolizumab, or durvalumab) for stage IV NSCLC, and their families and friends, evenly split among field sites in Denmark, the USA, and the UK. Data were collected using in-depth qualitative interviews, written exercises, and participant observation. Data analysis methods included interpretative phenomenological analysis, coding, and the development of grounded theory. Researchers spent 2 days with participants in their homes and accompanied them on health-related outings.
Our findings reveal that long-term survivors on IO experienced their journey in two phases: one in which their cancer had taken over their lives mentally, physically, and spiritually, and another in which their cancer consumed only a part of their everyday lives. Patients who survived longer than their initial prognosis existed in a limbo state in which they were able to achieve some semblance of normalcy in spite of being identified as having a terminal condition. This limbo state impacted their life priorities, decision-making, experience of patient support, and health information-seeking behaviors, all of which shaped their definitions and experience of QoL.
The results of this study, which identify the specific challenges of living in limbo, where patients are able to reclaim a portion of their pre-cancer lives while continuing to wrestle with a terminal prognosis, may inform how cancer research can more effectively define and measure the QoL impacts of IO treatments. Also, they may identify approaches that the cancer community can use to support the needs of patients living in a limbo state. These experiences may not be adequately understood by the cancer community or captured by existing QoL measures, which were designed prior to the emergence of IO and without sufficient incorporation of contextual, patient-driven experience.
Increased awareness of the specific experiences that come with long-term survival on IO may direct how resources should be spent for cancer support for patients and their families. Expanding how QoL is evaluated based on patients' lived experiences of IO can reflect a more accurate depiction of the treatment's benefits and harms.
本研究旨在探讨 24 名接受免疫肿瘤学(IO)治疗 IV 期非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)的患者及其家属和朋友个人关心的问题,以了解他们如何评估癌症治疗以及长期生存者生活质量(QoL)的决定因素。
对 24 名对 IV 期 NSCLC 有反应的接受 IO(pembrolizumab、nivolumab、atezolizumab 或 durvalumab)治疗的患者以及他们的家属和朋友进行了人种学研究,这些患者在丹麦、美国和英国的各个实地地点平均分配。使用深入的定性访谈、书面作业和参与者观察收集数据。数据分析方法包括解释现象学分析、编码和扎根理论的发展。研究人员在患者家中与患者共度 2 天,并陪同他们进行与健康相关的外出活动。
我们的研究结果表明,长期接受 IO 治疗的幸存者经历了两个阶段:一个阶段是癌症在精神、身体和精神上占据了他们的生活,另一个阶段是癌症只占据了他们日常生活的一部分。存活时间超过初始预期的患者处于一种中间状态,尽管被确定为患有绝症,但他们能够在某种程度上恢复正常。这种中间状态影响了他们的生活优先事项、决策、患者支持体验和健康信息寻求行为,所有这些都塑造了他们对 QoL 的定义和体验。
本研究结果确定了在中间状态下生活的具体挑战,即患者能够在继续应对终末期预后的同时,重新获得部分癌症前的生活,这可能为癌症研究如何更有效地定义和衡量 IO 治疗对 QoL 的影响提供信息。此外,它们可能确定癌症社区可以用来满足处于中间状态的患者需求的方法。这些经验可能没有被癌症社区充分理解,也没有被现有的 QoL 措施所捕捉,这些措施是在 IO 出现之前设计的,并且没有充分结合上下文、以患者为驱动的经验。
提高对 IO 长期生存所带来的特定经验的认识,可以指导如何为患者及其家属提供癌症支持资源。基于患者对 IO 的亲身体验来扩展 QoL 的评估,可以更准确地反映治疗的益处和危害。