| Literature DB >> 15150557 |
S Molenaar1, F Oort, M Sprangers, E Rutgers, E Luiten, J Mulder, H de Haes.
Abstract
A study was undertaken to describe the treatment preferences and choices of patients with breast cancer, and to identify predictors of undergoing breast-conserving therapy (BCT) or mastectomy (MT). Consecutive patients with stage I/II breast cancer were eligible. Information about predictor variables, including socio-demographics, quality of life, patients' concerns, decision style, decisional conflict and perceived preference of the surgeon was collected at baseline, before decision making and surgery. Patients received standard information (n=88) or a decision aid (n=92) as a supplement to support decision making. A total of 180 patients participated in the study. In all, 72% decided to have BCT (n=123); 28% chose MT (n=49). Multivariate analysis showed that what patients perceived to be their surgeons' preference and the patients' concerns regarding breast loss and local tumour recurrence were the strongest predictors of treatment preference. Treatment preferences in itself were highly predictive of the treatment decision. The decision aid did not influence treatment choice. The results of this study demonstrate that patients' concerns and their perceptions of the treatment preferences of the physicians are important factors in patients' decision making. Adequate information and communication are essential to base treatment decisions on realistic concerns, and the treatment preferences of patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15150557 PMCID: PMC2409497 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6601835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Main menu of decision aid. Legend: Borstsparend=breast-conserving therapy; Borstamputatie=mastectomy; Bestraling-radiation therapy; Herstel=recovery; Introductie=introduction; Uitzaaiingen=metastasis; Lotgenoten=fellow patients; Vormherstel=reconstruction; Wat is kanker=what is cancer?
Study design and sample size
| 1 | Standard ( | Decision aid ( | Standard ( | 89 |
| 2 | Decision aid ( | Standard ( | Decision aid ( | 46 |
| 3 | Standard ( | Decision aid ( | Standard ( | 45 |
| Total | 59 | 72 | 49 | 180 |
Number of patients per hospital and period given within parentheses.
Total patients per group: Decision aid: n=92; Standard information: n=88.
Patients’ background characteristics at baseline (n=180)
| Hospital | — | |
| St. Anna | 46 (26) | |
| NKI/AvL | 89 (49) | |
| MST | 45 (25) | |
| Age (median; min–max) | 54; 29–85 | |
| Education | — | |
| <Compulsory | 16 (09) | |
| Compulsory | 98 (54) | |
| >Compulsory; <university | 35 (19) | |
| University | 31 (17) | |
| Married/partner; not married/no partner | 119 (66); 61 (34) | |
| Lives alone; with spouse/partner | 44 (24); 136 (76) | |
| Has child(ren); no child(ren) | 148 (82); 32 (18) | |
| Has child(ren) at home; no child(ren) at home | 108 (60); 66 (37) | |
| Employed; unemployed | 97 (54); 83 (46) | |
| Generic QoL (mean; stdev) | 0–100 | |
| General health | 57.8±23.9 | |
| Physical functioning | 83.4±22.2 | |
| Pain | 17.4±20.5 | |
| Role functioning | 79.7±32.8 | |
| Social functioning | 84.8±25.1 | |
| Psychological functioning | 58.7±21.7 | |
| Energy | 64.8±22.7 | |
| Breast cancer-specific QoL (mean; stdev) | 0–100 | |
| Body image | 90.7±14.7 | |
| Sexual functioning | 24.9±23.2 | |
| Breast symptoms | 16.7±16.1 | |
| Future perspective | 47.3±30.4 | |
| Concern losing a breast (mean; stdev) | 1–10 | 7.6±3.0 |
| Aversion radiotherapy (mean; stdev) | 1–10 | 6.5±2.5 |
| Concern local recurrence (mean; stdev) | 1–5 | 3.7±1.1 |
| Decision style (mean; stdev) | 0–100 | |
| Avoidance | 21.8±19.0 | |
| Deferring responsibility | 82.3±17.5 | |
| Information seeking | 56.2±29.3 | |
| Deliberation | 88.0±16.0 | |
| Decisional conflict (mean; stdev) | 1–5 | |
| Decision uncertainty | 2.8±1.1 | |
| Factors contributing to uncertainty | 2.5±0.7 | |
| Patients’ treatment preference | — | |
| BCT | 114 (63) | |
| Unsure | 22 (12) | |
| Mastectomy | 44 (24) | |
| Perceived preference of physician | — | |
| BCT | 85 (47%) | |
| Has no preference | 74 (41%) | |
| Mastectomy | 19 (11%) |
Missing data for six patients (3%).
Figure 2Prediction of treatment preference and decision. Sample size=172; goodness-of-fit: χ2=8.9, degrees of freedom=8, P=0.35; for regression coefficients: *denotes P<0.15; **=P<0.05. Interpretation: All numbers represent standardised regression coefficients. For example, the −0.33 effect of ’’concern loss of breast’ on ‘treatment preference’ means that an increase in ‘concern’ of one standard deviation (s.d.) is associated with a decrease of 0.33 s.d. in ‘treatment preference’. Moreover, the 0.79 effect of ‘treatment preference’ on ‘treatment decision’ means that an increase of 1 s.d. in ‘treatment preference’ is associated with a 0.79 increase in the probit of ‘treatment decision’. That is, for example, an increase in BCT probability from 50 to 82%. Through ‘treatment preference’, ‘concern loss of breast’ has an indirect effect on ‘treatment decision’ which equals −0.33 × 0.79=−0.26.
Treatment preference and treatment decision
| Treatment preference (n; %) | |||
| Definitely BCT | 82 (46) | 74 (90) | 07 (09) |
| Probably BCT | 32 (18) | 26 (81) | 03 (09) |
| Unsure | 22 (12) | 15 (68) | 04 (18) |
| Probably MT | 17 (09) | 04 (24) | 12 (71) |
| Definitely MT | 27 (15) | 04 (15) | 23 (85) |
| 180 | 123 (72%) | 49 (28%) | |
Eight patients were lost at follow-up (see text for details). χ2=80.5; df=4; P<0.001.
Socio-demographic characteristics, by Treatment Preference and Treatment Decision
| Hospital | 0.87 | 0.50 | |||||
| NKI | 66% (59) | 12% (11) | 21% (19) | 71% (60) | 29% (25) | ||
| St Anna | 63% (29) | 11% (05) | 26% (12) | 78% (35) | 22% (10) | ||
| MST | 58% (26) | 13% (06) | 29% (13) | 67% (28) | 33% (14) | ||
| 52.9 (10.2) | 55.8 (10.2) | 59.9 (10.6) | <0.01 | 53.5 (10.0) | 58.4 (11.8) | 0.07 | |
| Education | 0.65 | 0.73 | |||||
| <compulsory | 63% (10) | 19% (03) | 19% (03) | 80% (12) | 20% (03) | ||
| Compulsory | 61% (60) | 11% (11) | 28% (27) | 72% (67) | 28% (26) | ||
| Compulsory; <university | 69% (24) | 17% (06) | 14% (05) | 73% (24) | 27% (09) | ||
| University | 65% (20) | 07% (02) | 29% (09) | 65% (20) | 36% (11) | ||
| Married/with partner | 62% (73) | 13% (16) | 25% (30) | 0.69 | 74% (83) | 27% (30) | 0.44 |
| Not married/no partner | 67% (41) | 10% (06) | 23% (14) | 68% (40) | 32% (19) | ||
| Has child(ren) | 62% (91) | 12% (18) | 26% (39) | 0.43 | 71% (100) | 29% (41) | 0.72 |
| No child(ren) | 72% (23) | 13% (04) | 16% (05) | 74% (23) | 26% (08) | ||
| Has child(ren) at home | 67% (44) | 14% (09) | 20% (13) | 0.44 | 69% (44) | 31% (20) | 0.48 |
| No child(ren) at home | 62% (67) | 10% (11) | 28% (30) | 74% (76) | 26% (27) | ||
| Lives alone | 64% (28) | 11% (05) | 25% (11) | 0.98 | 67% (29) | 33% (14) | 0.50 |
| Lives with spouse/partner | 63% (86) | 13% (17) | 24% (33) | 73% (94) | 27% (35) | ||
| Is employed | 68% (66) | 09% (09) | 23% (22) | 0.29 | 69% (64) | 31% (29) | 0.40 |
| Not employed | 58% (48) | 16% (13) | 27% (22) | 75% (59) | 25% (20) | ||
P-values derived from Pearson's χ2, except for age where P-value is derived from t-tests and analysis of variances (ANOVA).
QoL, attitudes, decision style, decisional conflict, perceived physician preference by treatment preference and decision
| General health | 61.0 (23.6) | 53.8 (24.1) | 51.8 (23.9) | 0.07 | 59.5 (24.2) | 54.1 (23.9) | 0.19 |
| Physical functioning | 87.5 (18.0) | 77.4 (23.6) | 95.9 (28.5) | <0.01 | 85.2 (20.0) | 78.9 (27.3) | 0.10 |
| Pain | 13.5 (17.9) | 24.5 (23.0) | 24.1 (23.1) | <0.01 | 15.8 (19.2) | 20.0 (22.0) | 0.21 |
| Role functioning | 84.4 (28.5) | 67.0 (42.5) | 73.9 (35.7) | 0.03 | 81.1 (31.9) | 76.0 (34.6) | 0.36 |
| Social functioning | 89.3 (20.1) | 78.2 (29.5) | 76.4 (31.5) | <0.01 | 86.8 (22.3) | 80.0 (31.4) | 0.11 |
| Psychological functioning | 59.6 (21.6) | 59.3 (22.2) | 56.1 (22.0) | 0.66 | 58.8 (20.9) | 58.8 (24.3) | 0.99 |
| Energy | 67.8 (23.1) | 61.8 (24.2) | 58.5 (19.9) | 0.06 | 66.8 (23.2) | 61.6 (21.6) | 0.18 |
| Body image | 92.4 (12.4) | 92.0 (14.7) | 85.6 (18.8) | 0.03 | 91.2 (14.4) | 89.8 (15.9) | 0.58 |
| Sexual functioning | 28.4 (22.9) | 17.4 (18.2) | 19.5 (25.0) | 0.03 | 26.8 (22.6) | 21.0 (24.5) | 0.15 |
| Breast symptoms | 13.7 (14.6) | 21.6 (22.1) | 22.0 (14.8) | <0.01 | 15.0 (16.0) | 20.4 (15.0) | 0.05 |
| Future perspective | 50.6 (30.3) | 39.4 (30.2) | 43.2 (30.1) | 0.17 | 47.7 (30.7) | 47.6 (28.9) | 0.99 |
| Concern loss of breast (1–10) | 8.4 (2.5) | 6.2 (3.1) | 6.3 (3.3) | <0.01 | 8.0 (2.7) | 6.5 (3.3) | <0.01 |
| Aversion radiation (1–10) | 6.2 (2.4) | 6.6 (2.2) | 7.4 (2.6) | 0.03 | 6.4 (2.4) | 6.8 (2.6) | 0.29 |
| Concern local recurrence (1–5) | 3.4 (1.0) | 3.8 (0.9) | 4.6 (0.6) | <0.01 | 3.5 (1.0) | 4.3 (0.9) | <0.01 |
| Avoidance | 21.0 (18.0) | 22.5 (21.6) | 23.5 (20.3) | 0.75 | 21.5 (19.4) | 21.8 (17.4) | 0.94 |
| Defer responsibility | 83.0 (17.0) | 75.4 (20.0) | 84.0 (17.2) | 0.14 | 82.7 (16.7) | 81.8 (19.5) | 0.77 |
| Information seeking | 56.5 (29.1) | 57.3 (34.0) | 54.8 (28.1) | 0.93 | 56.0 (30.3) | 56.3 (26.4) | 0.96 |
| Deliberation | 87.4 (16.7) | 87.3 (17.8) | 89.8 (13.2) | 0.69 | 87.4 (16.5) | 89.3 (15.1) | 0.50 |
| Decision uncertainty | 2.6 (1.1) | 3.7 (0.8) | 2.7 (1.2) | <0.01 | 2.8 (1.1) | 2.6 (1.1) | 0.25 |
| Factors contributing uncertainty | 2.5 (0.7) | 2.8 (0.8) | 2.3 (0.6) | 0.06 | 2.5 (0.8) | 2.4 (0.7) | 0.54 |
| <0.01 | <0.01 | ||||||
| Physician prefers BCT | 82% (70) | 12% (10) | 06% (05) | 87% (72) | 13% (11) | ||
| Physician has no preference | 54% (40) | 14% (10) | 32% (24) | 68% (46) | 32% (22) | ||
| Physician prefers MT | 16% (03) | 11% (02) | 74% (14) | 21% (04) | 79% (15) | ||
χ2 45.9; df 4.
χ2 33.9; df 2.
Study condition by treatment preference and treatment decision
| 0.20 | 0.37 | ||||||
| Decision aid | 59% (54) | 16% (15) | 25% (23) | 74% (67) | 26% (23) | ||
| Standard information | 68% (60) | 08% (07) | 24% (21) | 68% (56) | 32% (26) | ||
P-values derived from Pearson's χ2.