O'Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA.
Division of Hematology and Oncology, Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA.
Cancer Med. 2021 May;10(10):3288-3298. doi: 10.1002/cam4.3891. Epub 2021 May 1.
Given excellent survival outcomes in breast cancer, there is interest in de-escalating the amount of chemotherapy delivered to patients. This approach may be of even greater importance in the setting of the COVID-19 pandemic.
This concurrent mixed methods study included (1) interviews with patients and patient advocates and (2) a cross-sectional survey of women with breast cancer served by a charitable nonprofit organization. Questions evaluated interest in de-escalation trial participation, perceived barriers/facilitators to participation, and language describing de-escalation.
Sixteen patient advocates and 24 patients were interviewed. Key barriers to de-escalation included fear of recurrence, worry about decision regret, lack of clinical trial interest, and dislike for focus on less treatment. Facilitators included trust in physician recommendation, toxicity avoidance, monitoring for progression, perception of good prognosis, and impact on daily life. Participants reported that the COVID-19 pandemic made them more likely to avoid chemotherapy if possible. Of 91 survey respondents, many (43%) patients would have been unwilling to participation in a de-escalation clinical trial. The most commonly reported barrier to participation was fear of recurrence (85%). Few patients (19%) considered clinical trials themselves as a barrier to de-escalation trial participation. The most popular terminology describing chemotherapy de-escalation was "lowest effective chemotherapy dose" (53%); no patients preferred the term "de-escalation."
Fear of recurrence is a common concern among breast cancer survivors and patient advocates, contributing to resistance to de-escalation clinical trial participation. Additional research is needed to understand how to engage patients in de-escalation trials.
鉴于乳腺癌的生存结果极佳,人们对减少患者接受的化疗量产生了兴趣。在 COVID-19 大流行的背景下,这种方法可能更为重要。
本同期混合方法研究包括(1)对患者和患者倡导者进行访谈,以及(2)对一家慈善非营利组织服务的乳腺癌女性进行横断面调查。问题评估了对参与降级试验的兴趣、参与的感知障碍/促进因素,以及描述降级的语言。
对 16 名患者倡导者和 24 名患者进行了访谈。降级的主要障碍包括对复发的恐惧、对决策后悔的担忧、对临床试验缺乏兴趣以及对治疗减少的反感。促进因素包括对医生建议的信任、避免毒性、监测进展、对良好预后的看法以及对日常生活的影响。参与者报告说,COVID-19 大流行使他们如果可能的话更不愿意接受化疗。在 91 名调查受访者中,许多(43%)患者不愿意参与降级临床试验。参与的主要障碍是害怕复发(85%)。很少有患者(19%)认为临床试验本身是参与降级试验的障碍。描述化疗降级的最常用术语是“最低有效化疗剂量”(53%);没有患者喜欢“降级”这个术语。
复发恐惧是乳腺癌幸存者和患者倡导者的常见关注点,导致他们对参与降级临床试验的抵制。需要进一步研究以了解如何让患者参与降级试验。