| Literature DB >> 27590603 |
Danil V Makarov1,2,3, Erica Sedlander4,5, R Scott Braithwaite5, Scott E Sherman6,5, Steven Zeliadt7, Cary P Gross8, Caitlin Curnyn4,5, Michele Shedlin9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Approximately half of veterans with low-risk prostate cancer receive guideline-discordant imaging. Our objective was to identify and describe (1) physician knowledge, attitudes, and practices related to the use of imaging to stage prostate cancer, (2) patient attitudes and behaviors related to use of imaging, and (3) to compare responses across three VA medical centers (VAMCs).Entities:
Keywords: Guideline; Imaging; Prostate cancer; Qualitative; Semi-structured interviews; Theoretical domains framework
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27590603 PMCID: PMC5010696 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-016-0484-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
The domains of the Theoretical Domains Framework most applicable to prostate cancer imaging, as determined from analysis of semi-structured interviews of patients and physicians
| Relevant physician domains | Relevant patient domains |
|---|---|
| • Knowledge | • Knowledge |
| • Beliefs about consequences | • Beliefs about capabilities |
| • Beliefs about capabilities | • Emotion |
| • Social influences/norms | • Goals |
| • Environmental context and resources |
Patient demographic information (n = 22)
| Age, median (range) | 69 (52–79) |
| Race | |
| White | 12 (54.5 %) |
| Black | 8 (36.4 %) |
| Asian | 1 (4.5 %) |
| Unknown | 1 (4.5 %) |
| PSA, median (range) | 7.0 (2.8–37) |
| Gleason score | |
| ≤6 | 6 (27.3 %) |
| >6 | 16 (72.7 %) |
| Imaging | |
| CT scan | 11 (50.0 %) |
| Bone scan | 3 (13.6 %) |
| No imaging | 11 (50.0 %) |
| Treatment type | |
| Prostatectomy | 7 (31.8 %) |
| Radiotherapy | 7 (31.8 %) |
| Expectant management | 6 (27.3 %) |
| Other | 2 (9.1 %) |
Demographic information of physicians interviewed (n = 17)
| Median years from residency (range) | 11 (1–31) |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 1 (6 %) |
| Female | 16 (94 %) |
| Race | |
| White | 11 (65 %) |
| Black | 2 (12 %) |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 4 (24 %) |
| Board certified (%) | 13 (76 %) |
| Sample of fellowship areas | • Urologic oncology |
| Median number of incident prostate cancer cases per montha | 6 |
| Range of incident prostate cancer cases per montha | 2–12 |
aAs reported by the physician
Differences in the three medical centers—illustrated by quotes
| Themes | Low rates of inappropriate imaging | Middle rates of inappropriate imaging | High rates of inappropriate imaging |
|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge of guidelines | “Obviously everyone does things differently, but I’m … I take a very simplistic approach to it. Where I essentially follow the NCCN Guidelines.” | “I use them sometimes. Guidelines as a guideline but I tend to be more cautious, or shall we say more aggressive in terms of diagnostic testing.” | “I think as clinicians we can’t just follow a cookbook recipe.” |
| Intuition vs. guidelines | “When I look at something, be it a guideline or an article, I say mm – here’s absolute proof that getting that study doesn’t impact the outcome a bit, that is evidence.” | “So guidelines are just that they guide your care they don’t prescribe the care for you.” | “So I may be capturing a little bit more and exposing a few more people to imaging but that’s my internal guidelines.” |
| Colleagues’ imaging habits | “They’re doing things appropriately here but at other VA’s I’ve seen anyone with a diagnosis of prostate cancer will get a, a kneejerk bone scan and CT scan.” | “We have spoken with this particular individual [image avid colleague] but we found that this was his practice preference and he really wanted to stick with it although he understood what the guidelines were.” | “We’re all part of the referral process to him and so we all know what he feels is the next step [always obtain a CT scan].” |
| Tendency to question colleagues or discuss guidelines | “I think their answers would be very similar to mine. We all have a very similar practice pattern since we’re all practicing with the same university and VA. We try to follow, you know, guideline concordant care across all the different types of cancer we treat.” | “And so we’ve had a number of patients with Gleason 6 disease and somebody ordered a bone scan on them and now we have to figure out what these questionable areas of uptake mean. And we spend a lot of time trying to discuss these findings to figure out what to do with them.” | “We have a fellowship – a memorial trained oncology guy and to tell you the truth, to argue with him [about imaging practices] is pretty arrogant or discourteous.” |