Wong Rebecca, D'Mello Brooke, Mah Kenneth, Miljanovski Melissa, Li Athena, Shapiro Gilla, Rydall Anne, Zimmermann Camilla, Hannon Breffni, Rodin Gary
Department of Supportive Care, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network, 620 University Ave., 12th Floor, Toronto, ON, M5G 2C1, Canada.
Faculty of Health Sciences, Western University, London, ON, Canada.
Support Care Cancer. 2025 Apr 12;33(5):377. doi: 10.1007/s00520-025-09404-x.
Prognostic awareness refers to a patient's knowledge of their prognosis. Since this term implies that there is a knowable truth about survival, we propose utilizing the more neutral construct of "prognostic beliefs." We aimed to assess prognostic beliefs of patients with cancer receiving palliative care and their relationship to: i) recall of physician-communicated prognosis, ii) physical/psychological well-being, and iii) actual survival.
Participants were recruited in the outpatient palliative care clinic of a comprehensive cancer center in Toronto, Canada. Eligibility criteria were: ≥ 18 years, English-speaking, diagnosed with cancer, and receiving palliative care. Group comparisons of well-being were conducted using independent samples t-tests.
188 participants completed physical and psychosocial well-being questionnaires and the Prognostic Beliefs Questionnaire. 167/188 participants (88.8%) recalled discussing treatability/curability and 81 (43.1%) recalled discussing expected survival with their physician. Among 147 participants who rated treatability/curability, 129 (87.8%) had prognostic beliefs concordant with their recall of physician communication, none had worse prognostic beliefs than their oncologist, and 18 (12.2%) had better prognostic beliefs. Of 77 participants who rated expected survival, 58 (75.3%) had concordant prognostic beliefs, 1 (1.3%) had worse beliefs, and 18 (23.4%) had better beliefs. Among 66 participants who died, 45 (68.2%) were realistic regarding survival time, 12 (18.2%) had more pessimistic beliefs, and 9 (13.6%) had more optimistic beliefs.
Patients with cancer receiving palliative care tend to have realistic prognostic beliefs about the treatability and curability of their disease and their expected survival, without adverse effects of this knowledge on their well-being.
预后意识是指患者对自身预后的了解。由于该术语意味着存在关于生存的可知真相,我们建议使用更中性的“预后信念”概念。我们旨在评估接受姑息治疗的癌症患者的预后信念及其与以下方面的关系:i)对医生传达的预后的回忆,ii)身体/心理健康,以及iii)实际生存情况。
研究对象在加拿大多伦多一家综合癌症中心的门诊姑息治疗诊所招募。纳入标准为:年龄≥18岁、说英语、诊断为癌症且正在接受姑息治疗。使用独立样本t检验进行幸福感的组间比较。
188名参与者完成了身体和心理社会幸福感问卷以及预后信念问卷。167/188名参与者(88.8%)回忆起曾与医生讨论过可治疗性/可治愈性,81名(43.1%)回忆起曾与医生讨论过预期生存期。在对可治疗性/可治愈性进行评分的147名参与者中,129名(87.8%)的预后信念与他们对医生沟通内容的回忆一致,没有人的预后信念比肿瘤医生更差,18名(12.2%)的预后信念更好。在对预期生存期进行评分的77名参与者中,58名(75.3%)的预后信念一致,1名(1.3%)信念更差,18名(23.4%)信念更好。在66名死亡的参与者中,45名(68.2%)对生存时间的看法现实,12名(18.2%)信念更悲观,9名(13.6%)信念更乐观。
接受姑息治疗的癌症患者对其疾病的可治疗性、可治愈性以及预期生存期往往有现实的预后信念,且这种认知对其幸福感没有负面影响。