Department of Surgery, Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Division of Epidemiology, Department of Internal Medicine, Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA.
Ann Surg Oncol. 2020 Oct;27(10):3623-3632. doi: 10.1245/s10434-020-08485-8. Epub 2020 Jun 3.
Retrospective studies have reported that breast cancer patients who perceived more personal responsibility for the surgery decision were more likely to undergo aggressive surgery. We examined this in a prospective study.
100 newly diagnosed breast cancer patients identified their decision- making role using the Patient Preference Scale. Chart review captured the initial surgery received. Patient decision role preference, role perception, role concordance, and provider role perception were compared with type of surgery to assess differences between mastectomy and lumpectomy groups and unilateral versus bilateral mastectomy. We compared type of surgery and patient role concordance. Satisfaction with Decision immediately after the visit, Decision Regret and FACT-B quality of life at 2 weeks and 6 months were assessed and compared with type of surgery.
Patient decision role preference (p = 0.49) and perception (p = 0.16) were not associated with type of surgery. Provider perception of patient role was associated with type of surgery, with providers perceiving more passive patient roles in the mastectomy group (p = 0.026). Patient role preference varied significantly by stage of disease (= 0.024), with stage 0 (64%, N = 6) and stage III (60%, N = 6) patients preferring active roles and stage I (60%, N = 25) and stage II (52%, N = 16) patients preferring a collaborative role.
Patient role preference and perception were not associated with type of surgery, while provider perception of patient role was. Patient role preference varied by stage of disease. Further study is warranted to better understand how disease factors and provider interactions affect decision role preferences and perceptions and surgical choice.
The study was registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT03350854). https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03350854 .
回顾性研究报告称,认为自己对手术决策负有更多个人责任的乳腺癌患者更有可能接受积极的手术。我们在一项前瞻性研究中对此进行了检查。
100 名新诊断的乳腺癌患者使用患者偏好量表确定他们的决策角色。病历回顾记录了最初接受的手术。比较患者决策角色偏好、角色认知、角色一致性和提供者角色认知与手术类型,以评估乳房切除术组和单侧与双侧乳房切除术组之间的差异。我们比较了手术类型和患者角色一致性。评估并比较了就诊后即刻的决策满意度、决策后悔和 FACT-B 生活质量在 2 周和 6 个月时的情况。
患者决策角色偏好(p=0.49)和认知(p=0.16)与手术类型无关。提供者对患者角色的认知与手术类型相关,提供者在乳房切除术组中认为患者角色更被动(p=0.026)。患者角色偏好因疾病分期而异(=0.024),0 期(64%,N=6)和 3 期(60%,N=6)患者更喜欢积极的角色,1 期(60%,N=25)和 2 期(52%,N=16)患者更喜欢协作的角色。
患者角色偏好和认知与手术类型无关,而提供者对患者角色的认知则与手术类型相关。患者角色偏好因疾病分期而异。需要进一步研究以更好地了解疾病因素和提供者互动如何影响决策角色偏好和认知以及手术选择。
该研究在 clinicaltrials.gov 上注册(NCT03350854)。https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03350854