University of Utah Intermountain Healthcare Department of Population Health Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT.
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, Duke University.
Urology. 2022 Nov;169:156-161. doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2022.06.009. Epub 2022 Jun 26.
To examine the treatment recommendation patterns among urologists and radiation oncologists, the level of concordance or discordance between physician recommendations, and the association between physician recommendations and the treatment that patients received.
The study was a secondary analysis of data from a randomized clinical trial conducted November 2010 to April 2014 (NCT02053389). Eligible participants were patients from the trial who saw both specialists. The primary outcome was physician recommendations that were scored using an adapted version of the validated PhyReCS coding system. Secondary outcomes included concordance between physician recommendations and the treatment patients received.
Participants were 108 patients (Mean age 61.9 years; range 43-82; 87% non-Hispanic White). Urologists were more likely to recommend surgery (79% of recommendations) and radiation oncologists were more likely to recommend radiation (68% of recommendations). Recommendations from the urologists and radiation oncologists were concordant for only 33 patients (30.6%). Most patients received a treatment that both physicians recommended (59%); however, 35% received a treatment that only one of their physicians recommended. When discordant, urologists more often recommended surgery and radiation oncologists recommended radiation and surgery as equally appropriate options.
Urologists and radiation oncologists are more likely to differ than agree in their treatment recommendations for the same patients with clinically localized prostate cancer and more likely to favor treatment aligned with their specialty. Additional studies are needed to better understand how patients make decisions after meeting with two different specialists to inform the development of best practices within oncology clinics.
考察泌尿科医生和放射肿瘤学家的治疗推荐模式、医生建议的一致性或不一致性以及医生建议与患者接受治疗之间的关联。
本研究是对 2010 年 11 月至 2014 年 4 月进行的一项随机临床试验(NCT02053389)数据的二次分析。合格的参与者是来自该试验的同时看过这两种专家的患者。主要结果是使用经过验证的 PhyReCS 编码系统的改编版本对医生的建议进行评分。次要结果包括医生建议与患者接受的治疗之间的一致性。
参与者为 108 名患者(平均年龄 61.9 岁;范围 43-82;87%非西班牙裔白人)。泌尿科医生更可能推荐手术(79%的建议),而放射肿瘤学家更可能推荐放疗(68%的建议)。泌尿科医生和放射肿瘤学家的建议仅对 33 名患者(30.6%)一致。大多数患者接受了两位医生都推荐的治疗方法(59%);然而,35%的患者接受了仅一位医生推荐的治疗方法。在不一致的情况下,泌尿科医生更常推荐手术,而放射肿瘤学家则认为放疗和手术同样是合适的选择。
对于患有临床局限性前列腺癌的同一患者,泌尿科医生和放射肿瘤学家的治疗建议更可能存在差异而不是一致,并且更可能倾向于与自己专业相一致的治疗方法。需要进一步的研究来更好地了解患者在与两位不同专家会面后如何做出决策,以为肿瘤学诊所制定最佳实践提供信息。