| Literature DB >> 32354355 |
Bryanna B Nyhof1, Frances C Wright2, Nicole J Look Hong2, Gary Groot3, Lucy Helyer4, Pamela Meiers3, May Lynn Quan5, Nancy N Baxter6,7, Robin Urquhart4, Rebecca Warburton8, Anna R Gagliardi9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Women with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) report poor patient-clinician communication, and long-lasting confusion and anxiety about their treatment and prognosis. Research shows that patient-centred care (PCC) improves patient experience and outcomes. Little is known about the clinician experience of delivering PCC for DCIS. This study characterized communication challenges faced by clinicians, and interventions they need to improve PCC for DCIS.Entities:
Keywords: Communication; Decision-making; Ductal carcinoma in situ; Patient-centred care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32354355 PMCID: PMC7191683 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-06821-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Participant characteristics
| Characteristic | n (% of 46) |
|---|---|
| Specialty | |
| General Surgeon | 9 (19.5) |
| Surgical Oncologist | 10 (21.7) |
| Radiation Oncologist | 12 (26.1) |
| Medical Oncologist | 4 (8.7) |
| Radiologist | 5 (10.8) |
| Registered nurse/ patient navigator | 6 (13.0) |
| Province | |
| British Columbia | 12 (26.1) |
| Alberta | 2 (4.3) |
| Manitoba | 3 (6.5) |
| Ontario | 21 (45.6) |
| Nova Scotia | 2 (4.3) |
| Newfoundland | 6 (13.0) |
| Hospital Setting | |
| Academic | 39 (84.7) |
| Community | 7 (15.2) |
| Self-reported years of practice | |
| < 10 years | 28 (60.8) |
| ≥ 10 years | 18 (39.1) |
Themes and exemplar quotes by PCC domain [34]
| PCC domains | Themes | Exemplar quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Fostering healing relationship | Building rapport | You have to you know take the time to get to know the patient well enough to be able to tailor your approach to them. (06 gen surg) |
| You have to have the ability as a physician to say, you have all the time you need and I’m here, I always sit down with the patient and give them the correct idea that I’m listening, that I do have time. (05 surg onc) | ||
| Exchanging information | Label for DCIS | Some people talk about DCIS as being a pre-cancer and patients often come in from the surgeons saying that, but I don’t agree with that particular term. So, if that’s the case I clarify that it is breast cancer, but it’s very early (04 rad onc) |
| Achieving patient understanding | The main barrier honestly for the most part is a patient just having the capacity to understand the notion of a non-invasive breast cancer and the potential for it to develop into an invasive breast cancer and that it’s not currently a threat; patients have a hard time wrapping their head around that notion. (07 rad onc) | |
| I see my patients at 6-month follow-up following surgery … and when I see them again, sometimes patients are still asking me whether or not they actually had cancer or whether it was DCIS or not. (04 gen sx) | ||
| You end up spending a lot of time explaining to them the difference between DCIS and invasive breast cancer because they don’t necessarily understand that often when they come. They know they have breast cancer and that’s all they understand. (04 med onc) | ||
| Justifying treatment despite good prognosis | They find it harder to understand why they need a mastectomy for pre-invasive disease … it’s not that serious but you need a mastectomy. That can be a difficult discussion (03 surg onc) | |
| Providing supplemental information | I have my own personal website which has a whole bunch of websites on it. So I kind of refer them to that to look at if they’re of that … wanting more information. So like I said, I have a personal website. It has lists of places you can go. Like the Cancer Society and the NIH and places they can search for reputable information (01 gen surg) | |
| I refer patients to information from randomized trials because with DCIS there are many randomized trials; and very consistent information from the randomized trials. So I like to use that information (04 rad onc) | ||
| If they want more information … I’m not sure where or who I’d send them too? if they have questions along those lines, like someone else ends up dealing with them more than me. (10 surg onc) | ||
| I’ll often times draw a sketch or show diagrammatically you know how … how for instance DCIS hasn’t invaded through base membrane. So I draw a picture of what a milk duct looks like and show how cancer cells populate and multiply. (05 gen surg) | ||
| Addressing Emotions | Emphasizing good prognosis | I usually try to explain to the patients that it represents the best form of breast cancer if they were ever going to get problem of this nature. (05 gen surg) |
| Referring to supportive care | These are high maintenance emotional needs patients. So having somebody that they can access after the consultation is over just alleviates a lot of their psychological consternation. (09 surg onc) | |
| Managing Uncertainty | Describing uncertainty | I tell them that not all ductal carcinoma in situ will progress to cancer. We don’t know exactly which ones will and which ones won’t. (03 gen surg) The surgery is more as a precaution to prevent further development of invasive disease but more also to make sure that that’s all that there is there. (07 surg onc) |
| Making Decisions | Involving women in decision making | I make sure I know before I go in with the patient whether or not it is amenable to do breast conserving surgery. I’ll make sure they have no contraindications of radiation … then I can present to them the options. But I don’t want to present options that are inappropriate. Then it’s at the patient choice, which they prefer. (08 surg onc) |
| Some women choose to have a mastectomy for this condition but I certainly make it very clear that for that woman that is not necessary and it could be completely addressed without a mastectomy with a much lesser surgery, less invasive, fewer complications, etc., and then I would encourage that. (09 surg onc) | ||
| If the area looks readily resectable I don’t even mention the word mastectomy. I just say we’re gonna, we’ll get this area out. (04 surg onc) | ||
| Enabling Self-Management | Paucity of DCIS-specific resources and support | I don’t think there’s anything that’s specific to DCIS. A lot of it is kind of it is around the surgery and what to expect at the time of surgery and if they need a wire localization procedure. What that involves and that kind of stuff.. (02 surg onc) |
| I don’t think there are ones [support groups] for DCIS specifically. I think they’re all breast … that’s the problem, breast cancer patients. So these people are going to support groups with cancer people which is not ideally the best way. (07 surg onc) |
Summary of challenges and variability in PCC for DCIS
| PCC domain | Approaches | Challenges or Variability |
|---|---|---|
| Fostering Healing Relationships | • Exhibit patience | – |
| • Affirm they are listening | ||
| • Exchange pleasantries | ||
| • Sit at same level | ||
| • Make eye contact | ||
| Exchanging information | • Distinguish DCIS from invasive cancer | • Clinicians differed in whether they believed DCIS was cancer; as a result, terms used to describe DCIS also differed: ‘abnormal cells’ versus ‘early stage breast cancer’ |
| • Avoid using the word ‘cancer’ | ||
| • Spend time explaining DCIS, sometimes over multiple appointments | • Frustrating when patients remain confused about DCIS despite their efforts to explain it | |
| • Difficult to justify treatment while also assuring women of a good prognosis; this was frustrating because they knew it further confused women | ||
| • Use self-drawn notes or diagrams in additional to verbal information | ||
| • Internet information of poor quality; unaware of good quality Internet information on DCIS | ||
| • Refer women to web sites for supplemental information | ||
| Addressing Emotions | • Alleviate concerns by emphasizing a good prognosis | • Recognize that women with DCIS experience anxiety and concerns but do not directly address emotions |
| • Refer women to patient navigators, social workers for information and emotional support | ||
| • Lack access to patient navigators or social workers | ||
| Managing Uncertainty | – | • Uncertainty not defined or explained in brief, vague terms (i.e. unlikely) |
| • None shared statistics or scientific evidence | ||
| Making Decisions | – | • Describe options but recommend one |
| • Describe and recommend only one option | ||
| Enabling Self-Management | – | • Self-care advice or support specific to invasive breast cancer |
| • Unaware of DCIS-specific self-management resources |