Breast Surgery, University Hospital of North Tees, Stockton on Tees, UK.
Breast Surgery, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Aug 28;14(8):e084573. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-084573.
This study aims to prioritise the themes identified from the three gap analyses performed by a combination of scientists, clinicians, patients and members of the public to determine areas in breast cancer care where research is lacking. We also aimed to compare the priorities of areas of agreed research need between patients, the public, clinicians and scientists.
A cross-section of patients, public, clinicians and scientists completed a prioritisation exercise to rank the identified themes where research is lacking in breast cancer care.
Patients, clinicians and scientists who have experienced, managed or worked in the field of breast cancer and members of the public.
The research areas identified in the Breast Cancer Campaign, Association of Breast Surgery and North West Breast Research Collaborative gap analyses were outlined as 22 themes in lay terminology. Patients, members of the public, clinicians and scientists were invited to complete the prioritisation exercise, on paper or electronically, ranking the themes from 1 to 22. Comparisons were made with arithmetic mean ranking.
Of the 510 prioritisation exercises completed, 179 (35%) participants were patients, 162 (32%) public, 43 (8%) scientists and 122 (24%) clinicians. The theme ranked of highest priority overall was 'better prevention' (arithmetic mean rank 6.4 (SE 0.23)). 'Better prevention' was ranked top or second by patients, public and clinicians (7 (0.39), 4.7 (0.34) and 6.8 (0.5), respectively), however, scientists ranked this as their sixth most important factor (7.7 (0.92)). The public and clinicians had good agreement with patients (r=0.84 and r=0.75, respectively), whereas scientists had moderate agreement with patients (r=0.65). Certain themes were ranked significantly differently by participant groups. Compared with clinicians, patients prioritised research into 'alternative to mammograms', 'diagnostic (cancer) blood test' and 'rare cancers' (OR 2.1 (95% CI 1.3 to 3.5), p=0.002, OR 2.1 (95% CI 1.3 to 3.5), p=0.004 and OR 1.7 (95% CI 1.1 to 2.8), p=0.03). Compared with scientists, patients deprioritised 'better laboratory models' (OR 0.4 (95% CI 0.2 to 0.8), p=0.01).
This study demonstrates that patients, public, clinicians and scientists have different research priorities, with scientists being a particular outlier. This highlights the need to ensure the engagement of patients and public in research funding prioritisation decisions.
本研究旨在对由科学家、临床医生、患者和公众成员共同进行的三次差距分析中确定的主题进行优先级排序,以确定乳腺癌护理中缺乏研究的领域。我们还旨在比较患者、公众、临床医生和科学家之间对已确定的研究需求领域的优先级。
患者、公众、临床医生和科学家(曾经历过、管理过或从事过乳腺癌领域的人员)完成了一项优先级排序练习,对乳腺癌护理中缺乏研究的确定主题进行排名。
患者、临床医生和科学家(曾经历过、管理过或从事过乳腺癌领域的人员)和公众成员。
乳腺癌运动协会、乳腺外科学会和西北乳腺研究合作组织差距分析中确定的研究领域以通俗易懂的术语概述为 22 个主题。邀请患者、公众、临床医生和科学家完成优先级排序练习,以书面或电子方式对主题进行从 1 到 22 的排名。与算术平均值排名进行了比较。
在完成的 510 项优先级排序练习中,179 名(35%)参与者为患者,162 名为公众,43 名为科学家,122 名为临床医生。总体而言,优先级最高的主题是“更好的预防”(算术平均值排名 6.4(SE 0.23))。患者、公众和临床医生都将“更好的预防”列为最重要的因素(分别为 7(0.39)、4.7(0.34)和 6.8(0.5)),然而,科学家将其列为第六重要因素(7.7(0.92))。公众和临床医生与患者的一致性很好(r=0.84 和 r=0.75),而科学家与患者的一致性则为中等(r=0.65)。某些主题在不同的参与者群体中排名明显不同。与临床医生相比,患者更重视“乳房 X 光检查的替代方法”、“诊断(癌症)血液检测”和“罕见癌症”的研究(OR 2.1(95%CI 1.3 至 3.5),p=0.002,OR 2.1(95%CI 1.3 至 3.5),p=0.004 和 OR 1.7(95%CI 1.1 至 2.8),p=0.03)。与科学家相比,患者不太重视“更好的实验室模型”的研究(OR 0.4(95%CI 0.2 至 0.8),p=0.01)。
本研究表明,患者、公众、临床医生和科学家的研究重点不同,科学家是一个特别的例外。这凸显了确保患者和公众参与研究资金优先排序决策的必要性。