Sullivan Donald R, Golden Sara E, Schweiger Liana, Melzer Anne C, Datta Santanu, Davis James M, Wiener Renda Soylemez, Slatore Christopher G
Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, & Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
Center to Improve Veteran Involvement in Care, VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, OR, USA.
MDM Policy Pract. 2025 Jan 17;10(1):23814683241309945. doi: 10.1177/23814683241309945. eCollection 2025 Jan-Jun.
Many organizations recommend structured communication processes, including formal shared decision making (SDM), for patients undergoing lung cancer screening (LCS) using low-dose computed tomography (LDCT). We sought to understand if concordant and shared LCS decision making was associated with decisional conflict. In this prospective, observational study, we enrolled patients from 3 medical centers (2 Veterans Health Administration, 1 academic facility) after a decision-making interaction about undergoing LCS but before receiving the LDCT. We included patients who indicated they accepted or declined to undergo the LDCT. We evaluated preferred and actual decision-making roles and used multivariable linear and logistic regression models to measure the association of concordant (congruence between actual and preferred roles) and shared LCS decision making with decisional conflict to report adjusted odds ratios (AOR). Of the 409 participants with nonmissing information, 83% reported LCS decision-making role concordance. In addition, 223 (58%) reported an indeterminate level and 56 (14%) reported decisional conflict. LCS decision-making role concordance was not associated with decisional conflict (AOR = 0.86, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.38-1.94, = 0.71) compared with role discordance. Participant-reported actual LCS SDM role was not associated with decisional conflict (AOR = 0.99, 95% CI: 0.51-1.93, = 0.98) compared with patient- or provider-controlled roles. LCS decisional conflict was uncommon, although many patients reported an indeterminate level of decisional conflict. Neither concordant nor shared LCS decision-making role was associated with decisional conflict. Clinicians may be unable to decrease LCS decisional conflict using efforts to enhance decision-making interactions.
We evaluated patients' preferred and actual decision-making role and decisional conflict following a decision-making interaction about lung cancer screening (LCS).Concordant decision-making preference was not associated with decisional conflict.Actual decision-making role was also not associated with decisional conflict.Efforts to enhance decision-making interactions may not decrease LCS decisional conflict.
许多组织推荐采用结构化沟通流程,包括正式的共同决策(SDM),用于接受低剂量计算机断层扫描(LDCT)进行肺癌筛查(LCS)的患者。我们试图了解一致且共同的LCS决策是否与决策冲突相关。在这项前瞻性观察性研究中,我们在患者就接受LCS进行决策互动后但在接受LDCT之前,从3个医疗中心(2个退伍军人健康管理局、1个学术机构)招募患者。我们纳入了表示接受或拒绝接受LDCT的患者。我们评估了偏好和实际的决策角色,并使用多变量线性和逻辑回归模型来衡量一致(实际与偏好角色之间的一致性)和共同的LCS决策与决策冲突之间的关联,以报告调整后的优势比(AOR)。在409名信息无缺失的参与者中,83%报告LCS决策角色一致。此外,223名(58%)报告决策水平不确定,56名(14%)报告存在决策冲突。与角色不一致相比,LCS决策角色一致与决策冲突无关(AOR = 0.86,95%置信区间[CI]:0.38 - 1.94,P = 0.71)。与患者或提供者主导的角色相比,参与者报告的实际LCS SDM角色与决策冲突无关(AOR = 0.99,95% CI:0.51 - 1.93,P = 0.98)。LCS决策冲突并不常见,尽管许多患者报告决策冲突水平不确定。一致或共同的LCS决策角色均与决策冲突无关。临床医生可能无法通过加强决策互动来降低LCS决策冲突。
我们评估了患者在肺癌筛查(LCS)决策互动后的偏好和实际决策角色以及决策冲突。
决策偏好一致与决策冲突无关。
实际决策角色也与决策冲突无关。
加强决策互动的努力可能无法降低LCS决策冲突。