Center for Healthcare Organization & Implementation Research, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, MA and VA Bedford Healthcare System, Bedford, MA, USA.
The Pulmonary Center, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2024 Sep;39(12):2284-2291. doi: 10.1007/s11606-024-08705-x. Epub 2024 Mar 8.
Primary care providers (PCPs) are often the first point of contact for discussing lung cancer screening (LCS) with patients. While guidelines recommend against screening people with limited life expectancy (LLE) who are less likely to benefit, these patients are regularly referred for LCS.
We sought to understand barriers PCPs face to incorporating life expectancy into LCS decision-making for patients who otherwise meet eligibility criteria, and how a hypothetical point-of-care tool could support patient selection.
Qualitative study based on semi-structured telephone interviews.
Thirty-one PCPs who refer patients for LCS, from six Veterans Health Administration facilities.
We thematically analyzed interviews to understand how PCPs incorporated life expectancy into LCS decision-making and PCPs' receptivity to a point-of-care tool to support patient selection. Final themes were organized according to the Cabana et al. framework Why Don't Physicians Follow Clinical Practice Guidelines, capturing the influence of clinician knowledge, attitudes, and behavior on LCS appropriateness determinations.
PCP referrals to LCS for patients with LLE were influenced by limited knowledge of the life expectancy threshold at which patients are less likely to benefit from LCS, discomfort estimating life expectancy, fear of missing cancer at the point of early detection, and prioritization of factors such as quality of life, patient values, clinician-patient relationship, and family support. PCPs were receptive to a decision support tool to inform and communicate LCS appropriateness decisions if easy to use and integrated into clinical workflows.
Our study suggests knowledge gaps and attitudes may drive decisions to offer screening despite LLE, a behavior counter to guideline recommendations. Integrating a LCS decision support tool that incorporates life expectancy within the electronic medical record and existing clinical workflows may be one acceptable solution to improve guideline concordance and increase confidence in selecting high benefit patients for LCS.
初级保健医生(PCP)通常是与患者讨论肺癌筛查(LCS)的第一接触点。虽然指南建议不筛查预期寿命有限(LLE)且不太可能受益的人进行 LCS,但这些患者经常被转介进行 LCS。
我们试图了解 PCP 在为符合其他资格标准但预期寿命有限的患者进行 LCS 决策时面临的障碍,以及假设的即时护理工具如何支持患者选择。
基于半结构化电话访谈的定性研究。
来自六个退伍军人健康管理机构的 31 名转诊患者进行 LCS 的 PCP。
我们对访谈进行了主题分析,以了解 PCP 如何将预期寿命纳入 LCS 决策,并了解 PCP 对支持患者选择的即时护理工具的接受程度。最终主题根据 Cabana 等人的框架“为什么医生不遵循临床实践指南”进行组织,该框架捕捉了临床医生的知识、态度和行为对 LCS 适当性判断的影响。
PCP 对 LLE 患者进行 LCS 转诊受到对患者不太可能从 LCS 中受益的预期寿命阈值的知识有限、估计预期寿命不适、担心在早期检测点错过癌症以及优先考虑生活质量、患者价值观、医患关系和家庭支持等因素的影响。PCP 对决策支持工具表示欢迎,如果易于使用并集成到临床工作流程中,他们可以使用该工具来告知和传达 LCS 的适当性决策。
我们的研究表明,尽管 LLE,但知识差距和态度可能会促使做出提供筛查的决定,这种行为与指南建议背道而驰。整合一个即时护理决策支持工具,该工具将预期寿命纳入电子病历和现有的临床工作流程中,可能是提高指南一致性并增加对 LCS 高获益患者选择信心的一种可接受的解决方案。