| Literature DB >> 25992887 |
Ray Moynihan1, Brooke Nickel2, Jolyn Hersch2, Elaine Beller1, Jenny Doust1, Shane Compton3, Alexandra Barratt2, Lisa Bero4, Kirsten McCaffery2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite evidence about the "modern epidemic" of overdiagnosis, and expanding disease definitions that medicalize more people, data are lacking on public views about these issues. Our objective was to measure public perceptions about overdiagnosis and views about financial ties of panels setting disease definitions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25992887 PMCID: PMC4439083 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0125165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Survey Questions.
| Survey Question | Response Format |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Have you seen or heard the term ‘over-diagnosis’ before today? | Yes |
| No | |
| Don’t know | |
| A generally accepted view is that over-diagnosis happens when people are diagnosed with a disease that would never have harmed them. This could be due to the condition being so slow developing or them displaying only very minor symptoms. Given this explanation, have you seen or heard the term or concept of ‘over-diagnosis’? | Yes |
| No | |
| Don’t Know | |
| Has a doctor ever told you that healthy people can be over-diagnosed as a result of being screened or tested for a disease? | Yes |
| No | |
| Don’t Know | |
| [For those who reported being screened for prostate or breast cancer]: Were you told about the risk of over-diagnosis? | Yes |
| No | |
| Don’t Know | |
| Do you think routine screening tests for healthy people are almost always a good idea? | Yes |
| No | |
| Don’t Know | |
| When healthy people are considering having a screening test—along with being told about the potential benefits of the screening test—do you agree or disagree that they should be informed about the potential risk of over-diagnosis? | 7 point Likert scale: |
| Completely Agree | |
| to | |
| Completely Disagree | |
|
| |
| Imagine that there was a genetic screening test which could analyse your genes and identify all the diseases you may ever get, for which some had effective treatments and some did not. Would you be likely or unlikely to have that screening test? | 7 point Likert scale: |
| Completely Likely | |
| To | |
| Completely Unlikely | |
| Imagine now that the results of the genetic screening test were often uncertain, and the predictions could be wrong. Would you be likely or unlikely then to have that screening test? | 7 point Likert scale: |
| Completely Likely | |
| To | |
| Completely Unlikely | |
|
| |
| From time to time, doctors who specialise in a particular disease will come together to discuss the characteristics of that disease, to decide who should be diagnosed with it and who requires treatment for it. These are called panels and currently some doctors on these panels have financial ties with pharmaceutical companies who market drugs for that disease and some do not. Is it appropriate or inappropriate for doctors who have financial ties with pharmaceutical companies to be members of these panels? | 7 point Likert scale: |
| Completely Appropriate | |
| to | |
| Completely Inappropriate | |
| Ideally, what proportion of the panel should be made up of doctors with financial ties to pharmaceutical companies who market drugs for that disease? | None |
| A minority | |
| A majority |
Fig 1Participant recruitment for Computer Assisted Telephone Interview survey of 500 Australians.
*Ineligible participants included: persons under age 18 years; those with a medical condition rendering them physically unable to complete the interview; people with language difficulties; respondent away for duration of fieldwork; people claiming to have done survey or named person not known.
Characteristics of survey respondents.
| Characteristic | No. of Survey Respondents n = 500 (%) |
|---|---|
| Age, y | |
| 18–29 | 76 (15.2) |
| 30–49 | 139 (27.8) |
| 50–69 | 209 (41.8) |
| ≥70 | 76 (15.2) |
| Sex | |
| Men | 218 (43.6) |
| Women | 282 (56.4) |
| Education | |
| <High school | 74 (14.8) |
| High school graduate | 169 (33.8) |
| Bachelor degree/advanced diploma | 168 (33.6) |
| >Bachelor degree | 89 (17.8) |
| Employment | |
| Employed | 298 (59.6) |
| Unemployed | 20 (4) |
| Not working | 182 (36.4) |
| Cancer diagnosis | |
| Yes | 70 (14.0) |
| No | 430 (86.0) |
*Australian population data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics 2011 Census;
** High school normally completed at age 17;
*** Not in labour force (e.g. student, retired)
Main results of national community survey on overdiagnosis.
| On overdiagnosis | Unadjusted | Adjusted | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes/Agree | No/Disagree | Don’t know/ neither/refused | Yes/Agree | No/Disagree | Don’t know/ neither/refused | |
| n(%)(95%CI) | n(%)(95%CI) | n(%)(95%CI) | %(95%CI) | %(95%CI) | %(95% CI) | |
| Seen or heard term ‘overdiagnosis’ before? | 313(62.6)(58.2–66.8) | 181(36.2)(32.0–40.6) | 6(1.2)(0.5–2.7) | 57.4(52.9–61.8) | 41.1(36.7–45.4) | 1.5(0.8–3.3) |
| Doctor ever told you about overdiagnosis? | 52(10.4)(7.9–13.5) | 443(88.6)(85.4–91.2) | 5(1.0)(0.4–2.5) | 9.7(7.2–12.6) | 89.5(86.3–91.9) | 0.8(0.3–2.2) |
| If screened for prostate cancer, told of overdiagnosis? | 16(18.2)(11.1–28.1) | 71(80.7)(70.6–88.0) | 1(1.1)(0.1–7.1) | 15.8(9.2–26.3) | 83.1(72.4–89.9) | 1.1(0.1–7.6) |
| If screened for breast cancer, told of overdiagnosis? | 18(9.7)(6.0–15.1) | 162(87.1)(81.2–91.4) | 6(3.2)(1.3–7.2) | 10.8(6.5–17.3) | 86.4(79.5–91.3) | 2.9(0.9–7.3) |
| Think routine screening almost always good idea? | 382(76.4)(72.4–80.0) | 85(17.0)(13.9–20.7) | 33(6.6)(4.7–9.2) | 79.0(75.1–82.4) | 15.1(12.1–18.5) | 6.0(4–8.3) |
| Should people be informed about risk of overdiagnosis? | 465(93.0)(90.3–95) | 18(3.6)(2.2–5.7) | 17(3.4)(2.1–5.5) | 93.4(90.8–95.4) | 3.5(2.4–6) | 3.0(1.9–5.3) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Likely or unlikely to have genetic screening test? | 243(48.6)(44.2–53.1) | 226(45.2)(40.8–49.7) | 31(6.2)(4.3–8.8) | 51.0(46.5–55.5) | 42.5(38.2–47.1) | 6.5(4.7–9.2) |
| If results uncertain, likely or unlikely to have test? | 142(28.4)(24.5–32.6) | 335(67.0)(62.7–71.1) | 23(4.6)(3–6.9) | 31.0(27.2–35.5) | 64.0(59.6–68.2) | 4.8(3.2–7.2) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Appropriate or inappropriate for doctors with ties to pharmaceutical companies to be panel members? | 71(14.2)(11.3–17.6) | 391(78.2)(74.3–81.7) | 38(7.6)(5.5–10.4) | 16.2(13–19.6) | 75.6(71.6–79.3) | 8.1(5.8–10.8) |
*Adjustment involved two-step, rim weighting as described in Methods; due to rounding some rows do not add to 100%; calculation of Confidence Intervals includes continuity correction
Fig 2Community views about availability of information on overdiagnosis.
Fig 3Community views about financial ties of panel members who set disease definitions.