Division of Pharmaceutical Outcomes and Policy, UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.
UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, UNC School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.
JCO Oncol Pract. 2020 Aug;16(8):e660-e667. doi: 10.1200/JOP.19.00550. Epub 2020 Mar 2.
Although studies in other clinical areas have shown that patient-clinician communication can positively influence adherence to medications, little is known about how oncologists address medication counseling during routine office visits. We describe patient-oncologist office-based discussions of oral chemotherapy treatment.
Transcripts of 24 patient-oncologist office visits were obtained from a national database. Patients were aged ≥ 19 years and prescribed capecitabine for colorectal cancer. We developed a structured coding worksheet using medication-counseling concepts previously identified as important to medication adherence and a grounded approach. Two coders reviewed transcripts for oncologists' provision of medication information, assessment of patients' adherence to medication, and the provision of self-management support for management of adverse effects. We assessed interrater reliability with Cohen κ statistics. We describe the counseling concepts present within patient-oncologist conversations and present illustrative quotes to describe how they were discussed.
Oncologists generally provided patients who had yet to initiate therapy comprehensive medication information; those in the midst of treatment received less information. Oncologists discussed patients' continued use of the medication (or discontinuation) among all patients who had initiated therapy (N = 18). How the patient was taking the medication (ie, therapy implementation) was less commonly discussed. Medication adverse effects were also discussed in all encounters. Self-management strategies were commonly provided, albeit mostly in response to a presenting symptom and not preemptively. Patients' use of concurrent medications, financial access to therapy, and assessments of logistical arrangements were discussed more sporadically.
Using audio recordings from a national sample of patient-oncologist office visits, we identified several potentially important opportunities to enhance medication counseling among patients prescribed capecitabine for the treatment of colorectal cancer.
尽管其他临床领域的研究表明,医患沟通可以积极影响患者对药物的依从性,但对于肿瘤医生在常规就诊期间如何进行药物咨询知之甚少。我们描述了口服化疗治疗中患者与肿瘤医生在办公室的讨论。
从国家数据库中获取了 24 例患者-肿瘤医生的门诊记录。患者年龄≥19 岁,接受卡培他滨治疗结直肠癌。我们使用先前确定的与药物依从性相关的药物咨询概念和扎根方法制定了结构化的编码工作表。两位编码员对转录本进行了审查,以评估肿瘤医生提供药物信息、评估患者对药物的依从性以及为管理不良反应提供自我管理支持的情况。我们使用 Cohen κ 统计评估了组内一致性。我们描述了患者与肿瘤医生对话中存在的咨询概念,并提供了说明性引语来描述如何讨论这些概念。
肿瘤医生通常在开始治疗前向尚未开始治疗的患者提供全面的药物信息;正在接受治疗的患者则获得较少的信息。在所有开始治疗的患者中(N=18),肿瘤医生讨论了患者继续使用(或停止使用)药物的情况。患者如何服用药物(即治疗实施)讨论较少。在所有情况下也都讨论了药物不良反应。虽然主要是在出现症状时而不是预防性地提供自我管理策略,但也经常提供自我管理策略。患者同时使用其他药物、获得治疗的经济机会以及对后勤安排的评估则讨论较少。
使用来自全国范围内的患者-肿瘤医生门诊记录的音频记录,我们确定了在为治疗结直肠癌开具卡培他滨的患者中增强药物咨询的几个潜在重要机会。