Lymphoma Service, Alfred Hospital and Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Department of Malignant Hematology, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute, Tampa, FL.
Blood Adv. 2023 Nov 28;7(22):6819-6828. doi: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2023010879.
The Virtual Opinions poll Independent Centered on CLL patients' Experience (VOICE) evaluated patients' knowledge about chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL), their perspectives on diagnosis and treatment, and their unmet needs. Clinicians and patient advocacy group representatives developed and distributed the survey from March through December 2022 in 12 countries, and 377 patients with ≥1 line of previous CLL treatment responded from Europe, Latin America, the United States, Australia, Egypt, and Turkey. A majority of them (90%; 336/374) relied on their physicians for information regarding CLL and treatment. If at high risk, respondents prefer oral medications to intravenous (78%; 232/296), fixed duration treatment over treatment until progression (69%; 185/270), outpatient over inpatient treatments (91%; 257/283). Over three-fourths of respondents (78%; 286/368) wanted to be involved in treatment decisions, but a minority actually participated (44%; 138/313). COVID-19 vaccinations were widely available (97%; 273/281), but one-fifth (19%; 63/331) were unaware that CLL increases vulnerability to infections. Most patients' physicians explained their treatment options (84%; 297/355), and 90% (271/301) understood their treatment. Notably, >10% would continue treatment normally if they experienced cardiac problems or arrhythmias, whereas 23% would consider stopping treatment if they developed skin cancer. Treatment-associated side effects affected 27% to 43% of patients. These results in a global patient population highlight gaps in patients' knowledge of risk groups, their susceptibility to infections including COVID, and the side effects of common treatments. Such knowledge can guide the appropriate targeting of patient education initiatives by clinicians, advocates, and policymakers.
虚拟意见民意调查独立关注 CLL 患者体验(VOICE)评估了患者对慢性淋巴细胞白血病(CLL)的认识、他们对诊断和治疗的看法以及未满足的需求。临床医生和患者权益组织代表于 2022 年 3 月至 12 月在 12 个国家/地区开发和分发了该调查,来自欧洲、拉丁美洲、美国、澳大利亚、埃及和土耳其的 377 名接受过≥1 线 CLL 治疗的患者做出了回应。他们中的大多数(90%;336/374)依赖医生获取有关 CLL 和治疗的信息。如果处于高风险,受访者更倾向于口服药物而非静脉注射药物(78%;232/296)、固定疗程治疗而非持续治疗直至进展(69%;185/270)、门诊治疗而非住院治疗(91%;257/283)。超过四分之三的受访者(78%;286/368)希望参与治疗决策,但实际上只有少数人参与(44%;138/313)。COVID-19 疫苗广泛可用(97%;273/281),但五分之一(19%;63/331)的人不知道 CLL 会增加感染的脆弱性。大多数患者的医生解释了他们的治疗选择(84%;297/355),90%(271/301)的人理解了他们的治疗。值得注意的是,如果他们出现心脏问题或心律失常,超过 10%的人会继续正常治疗,而如果他们患有皮肤癌,23%的人会考虑停止治疗。治疗相关的副作用影响了 27%至 43%的患者。这些来自全球患者群体的结果突出了患者对风险群体的认识、对包括 COVID 在内的感染的易感性以及常见治疗方法的副作用方面的差距。这种知识可以指导临床医生、倡导者和政策制定者针对患者教育计划的适当目标定位。