| Literature DB >> 17848910 |
A H Pieterse1, A M Stiggelbout, M C M Baas-Thijssen, C J H van de Velde, C A M Marijnen.
Abstract
Preoperative radiotherapy (PRT) in resectable rectal cancer improves local control but increases probability of faecal incontinence and sexual dysfunction. Consensus was reached in 2001 in the Netherlands on a guideline advising PRT to new patients. Purpose was to assess at what benefit oncologists and rectal cancer patients prefer PRT followed by surgery to surgery alone, and how oncologists and patients value various treatment outcomes. Sixty-six disease-free patients and 60 oncologists (surgical, radiation, medical) were interviewed. Minimally desired benefit from PRT (local control) was assessed using the Treatment Tradeoff Method. Importance of survival, local control, faecal incontinence, and sexual dysfunction in determining treatment outcome preferences was assessed using Adaptive Conjoint Analysis. The range of required benefit from PRT varied widely within participant groups. Seventeen percent of patients would choose PRT at a 0% benefit; 11% would not choose PRT for the maximum benefit of 11%. Mean minimally desired benefit excluding these two groups was 4%. For oncologists, the required benefit was 5%. Also, how strongly participants valued treatment outcomes varied widely within groups. Of the four outcomes, participants considered incontinence most often as most important. Relative treatment outcome importance differed between specialties. Patients considered sexual functioning more important than oncologists. Large differences in treatment preferences exist between individual patients and oncologists. Oncologists should adequately inform their patients about the risks and benefits of PRT, and elicit patient preferences regarding treatment outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17848910 PMCID: PMC2360393 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603954
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Consecutive information (treatment options, side effects, and consequence) presented with the TTM (male patient).
ACA treatment outcomes and outcome-probabilities (Frequencies out of 100 patients)
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| Probability of 5-year survival (all patients) | This is the probability that the patient is still alive 5 years after the disease was detected. A 5-year survival of 50% means that after 5 years, 50 out of 100 patients are still alive. The other 50 people may have died due to the recurrence of the disease, but may also well have died from other causes such as a heart attack | 70 | 66 | 65 | — |
| Probability of five-year local control | This is the probability that the tumour does not recur at the site that was operated on. If the tumour does recur at that site, it causes a lot of pain. It may in some instances be possible to treat it, but in others not. Often the prognosis is uncertain | 99 | 94 | 89 | — |
| Probability of faecal incontinence (all patients) | Incontinence in this interview refers to incontinence for stools and means unintentionally losing stools | 20 | 40 | 60 | 80 |
| Probability of sexual dysfunction (male patients) | You may think of problems with getting an erection (=erectile dysfunction) and with ejaculation, or of not being sexually active at all anymore | 30 | 40 | 50 | 60 |
| Probability of sexual dysfunction (female patients) | Dissatisfaction with sexuality usually results from not being able to enjoy sexual intercourse anymore because of pain or vaginal dryness | 10 | 30 | 50 | 70 |
Abbreviation: ACA, Adaptive Conjoint Analysis.
The expression ‘probability of local control’ was not used in patients but was explained as ‘probability that the tumour does not recur’.
Figure 2Adaptive conjoint analysis questionnaire.
Participants' background details
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| Mean age, years±s.d. (range) | 64±9.2 (41–84) |
| Mean time since surgery, years±s.d. (range) | 8±1.0 (6–10) |
| Treatment | |
| Surgery | 31 (47) |
| PRT+surgery | 35 (53) |
| Permanent stoma | |
| Yes | 25 (38) |
| No | 41 (62) |
| Incontinence (non-stoma patients) | |
| Never | 23 (56) |
| Sometimes | 17 (41) |
| Often | 1 (2) |
| Always | 0 |
| Mean age, years±s.d. (range) | 48±7.3 (35–62) |
| Mean time since specialisation, years±s.d. (range) | 13±8.1 (1–31) |
| Current institution | |
| Academic | 14 (23) |
| Non-academic | 46 (77) |
| Supervisor (ever) | |
| Yes | 9 (15) |
| No | 50 (85) |
| Member of a guideline committee (ever) | |
| Yes | 13 (22) |
| No | 47 (78) |
| Adherence to 2001 guideline | |
| Overall yes | 53 (90) |
| Yes, except for high tumours | 2 (3) |
| No, not in general | 4 (7) |
Numbers do not add up to 60 in oncologists due to missing data.
Reported rectal cancer treatment management within the oncologist's institution.
Figure 3Cumulative proportion of oncologists (N=58) and patients (N=66) preferring PRT according to minimum percentage of benefit in local control. Numbers of patients do not add up to 100% because of those never preferring PRT.
Figure 4Individual importance scores (range 0–100) of treatment outcomes in patients and clinicians. M=mean; s.d.=standard deviation; Pt=patient; Clin=clinician. One oncologist and four patients were excluded from the analyses because they valued the worst probability of one of the treatment outcomes highest compared to the other outcome probabilities of that outcome.