| Literature DB >> 19941668 |
Salimah H Meghani1, Christopher S Lee, Alexandra L Hanlon, Deborah W Bruner.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Men with prostate cancer are often challenged to choose between conservative management and a range of available treatment options each carrying varying risks and benefits. The trade-offs are between an improved life-expectancy with treatment accompanied by important risks such as urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction. Previous studies of preference elicitation for prostate cancer treatment have found considerable heterogeneity in individuals' preferences for health states given similar treatments and clinical risks.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19941668 PMCID: PMC2789058 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-9-47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Sample Descriptive Characteristics (n = 244)
| Variable | Mean ± SD or n (%) |
|---|---|
| Age | 60.36 ± 9.5 |
| Self-Identified Race/Ethnicity: | |
| Caucasian | 188 (77%) |
| African American | 50 (20.5%) |
| Other | 6 (2.5%) |
| Prostate Cancer: | |
| At-risk | 56 (23%) |
| Active Disease | 188 (77%) |
| Education: (n = 207) | |
| Less than High School | 45 (21.7%) |
| More than High School | 104 (50.2%) |
| Post Graduate | 58 (28%) |
| Income: (n = 182) | |
| ≤ $ 29,000/year | 42 (23.1%) |
| $ 30,000, < $ 75,000/year | 81 (44.5%) |
| ≥ $ 75,000/year | 59 (32.4%) |
| Marital Status: (n = 205) | |
| Married/Living with Sig. Other | 176 (85.9%) |
| Not Married | 29 (14.1%) |
| Job Status: (n = 200) | |
| Working | 118 (59%) |
| Not Working | 82 (41%) |
| Sex Important: (n = 243) | |
| Very Important | 97 (39.9%) |
| Somewhat Important | 114 (46.9%) |
| Unimportant | 32 (13.2%) |
| Ability to Have an Erection: (n = 223) | |
| Usually Able | 109 (48.9%) |
| Sometimes a Problem | 44 (19.7%) |
| Usually a Problem | 70 (31.4%) |
| Problems with Urinary Leaking: (n = 242) | |
| Never Have a Problem | 179 (74%) |
| Sometimes Have a Problem | 44 (18.2%) |
| Usually a Problem | 19 (7.9%) |
Sample TTO Utilities/Categories of Utility
| Utility | Mean (SD) (IQR) or n (%) |
|---|---|
| 40% Chance of Erectile Dysfunction** | .9156 (.146) (.857 to 1.0) |
| No-trade | 137 (56.4%) |
| .75 to .99 | 82 (33.7%) |
| .50 to .74 | 19 (7.8%) |
| Up to .49 | 5 (2.1%) |
| 80% Chance of Erectile Dysfunction* | .8636 (.187) (.786 to 1.0) |
| No-trade | 94 (38.7%) |
| .75 to .99 | 108 (44.4%) |
| .50 to .74 | 30 (12.3%) |
| Up to .49 | 11 (4.5%) |
| 10% Chance of Incontinence** | .9544 (.120) (.929 to 1.0) |
| No-trade | 181 (74.5%) |
| .75 to .99 | 52 (21.4%) |
| .50 to .74 | 7 (2.9%) |
| Up to .49 | 3 (1.2%) |
| 30% Chance of Incontinence* | .8831 (.186) (.857 to 1.0) |
| No-trade | 114 (47.7%) |
| .75 to .99 | 92 (38.5%) |
| .50 to .74 | 23 (9.6%) |
| Up to .49 | 10 (4.2%) |
| 40% Chance of Erectile Dysfunction + 10% Chance of Incontinence** | .8358 (.196) (.757 to 1.0) |
| No-trade | 65 (26.6%) |
| .75 to .99 | 133 (54.5%) |
| .50 to .74 | 32 (13.1%) |
| Up to .49 | 14 (5.7%) |
TTO = time trade-off
** Risk associated with Radiation Therapy
*Risk associated with Radical Prostatectomy
Latent Class Cluster Models of Prostate Cancer Treatment Utilities
| Classes | LMR Test | BIC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 320.7 | < .0005 | 2266.2 |
| 4 | 59.7 | .007 | 2183.3 |
| 5 | 53.7 | .27 | 2216.8 |
BIC = Bayesian Information Criteria
LMR = Lo-Mendell-Rubin Adjusted Test
Cluster Identification Using Latent Class Mixture Model Analysis
| 40% Chance of Erectile Dysfunction** | |||
| No-trade | 4 (12.90) | 38 (32.76) | 95 (97.94) |
| .75 to .99 | 5 (16.13) | 76 (65.52) | 1 (1.03) |
| .50 to .74 | 17(54.84) | 2 (1.72) | 0 (0.00) |
| Up to .49 | 5 (16.13) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) |
| 80% Chance of Erectile Dysfunction* | |||
| No-trade | 0 (0.00) | 17 (14.66) | 77 (79.38) |
| .75 to .99 | 7 (22.58) | 82 (70.69) | 19 (19.58) |
| .50 to .74 | 13 (41.94) | 17 (14.66) | 0 (0.00) |
| Up to .49 | 11 (35.48) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) |
| 10% Chance of Incontinence** | |||
| No-trade | 9 (29.03) | 75 (64.66) | 97 (100) |
| .75 to .99 | 11 (35.48) | 41 (35.34) | 0 (0.00) |
| .50 to .74 | 7 (22.58) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) |
| Up to .49 | 3 (9.68) | 0 (0.00) | 0 (0.00) |
| 30% Chance of Incontinence* | |||
| No-trade | 2 (6.54) | 22 (18.97) | 90 (92.78) |
| .75 to .99 | 3 (9.68) | 87 (75.00) | 2 (2.06) |
| .50 to .74 | 16 (51.61) | 4 (3.45) | 3 (3.09) |
| Up to .49 | 9 (29.03) | 1 (0.86) | 0 (0.00) |
| 40% Chance of Erectile Dysfunction + 10% Chance of Incontinence** | |||
| No-trade | 1 (3.23) | 7 (6.03) | 57 (58.76) |
| .75 to .99 | 1 (3.23) | 101 (87.07) | 31 (31.96) |
| .50 to .74 | 17 (54.84) | 8 (6.90) | 7 (7.22) |
| Up to .49 | 12 (38.71) | 0 (0.00) | 2 (2.06) |
†P <.0001(based on Bayesian Information Criteria & Lo-Mendell-Rubin Adjusted Test (see Table 3)
** Risk associated with Radiation Therapy
*Risk associated with Radical Prostatectomy.
Multinomial Logistic Regression Results for Latent Classes of Prostate Cancer Utilities
| Covariate | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 1.046 (0.982 to 1.113) | 1.021 (0.979 to 1.064) | 1.025 (0.964 to 1.089) |
| Non-white | 1.319 (0.444 to 3.921) | 0.409 (0.182 to 0.920)* | 3.222 (1.071 to 9.694)* |
| Men with prostate cancer | 0.787 (0.181 to 3.411) | 0.460 (0.170 to 1.245) | 1.711 (0.411 to 7.126) |
| Sex very important | 7.063 (1.413 to 35.301)* | 4.506 (1.705 to 11.910)** | 1.568 (0.291 to 8.443) |
| Sex somewhat important | 3.052 (0.607 to 15.337) | 4.377 (1.745 to 10.981)** | 0.697 (0.128 to 3.800) |
*= P < 0.05; **= P < 0.01; CI = confidence interval; OR = odds ratio