| Literature DB >> 34056687 |
Mona L Martin1, Julia Correll1, Andrew Walding2, Anna Rydén3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe symptoms and side effects experienced by patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), assess how patients allocate sensations (i.e. symptoms or side effects) to either the disease or its treatment, and evaluate how patients balance side effects with treatment benefits.Entities:
Keywords: Interview studies; Non-small cell lung cancer; Qualitative; Side effects; Symptoms; Treatment benefit
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34056687 PMCID: PMC8800875 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-021-02882-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Fig. 1Key topics in interview guide. NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer
Coded data frequency for symptom or side effect concepts
| AURA sub-study ( | ARCTIC sub-study ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Symptoms or side effects | ||||
| Energy-relateda | 85 (13) | 15 (65) | 60 (17) | 15 (79) |
| Pain and discomfortb | 105 (16) | 15 (65) | 67 (19) | 17 (90) |
| Respiratoryc | 132 (20) | 18 (78) | 83 (23) | 16 (84) |
| Digestived | 90 (14) | 16 (70) | 59 (16) | 16 (84) |
| Sleep disturbancese | 6 (1) | 5 (22) | 12 (3) | 8 (42) |
| Oralf | 33 (5) | 9 (39) | 8 (2) | 6 (37) |
| Skin and nailg | 140 (21) | 17 (74) | 25 (7) | 8 (42) |
| Sensoryh | 34 (5) | 11 (48) | 23 (6) | 12 (63) |
| Genitourinaryi | 1 (0) | 1 (4) | 0 (0) | 1 (5) |
| Additionalj | 36 (5) | 8 (35) | 22 (6) | 11 (58) |
aIncludes exhaustion, fatigue, low energy, low stamina, tiredness, and weakness
bIncludes abdominal pain, achiness, back pain, chest pain, eye pain, headache, fibromyalgia, hip-waist pain, joint or bone pain, mouth pain, muscle pain or cramping, neck pain, nipple pain, pain (unspecified), pain in extremities, side pain, shoulder pain, sore or painful skin, stiffness, and whole-body pain
cIncludes bronchitis, coughing, coughing-up blood, difficulty breathing, dry nose, fluid in lungs, phlegm or mucus, pneumonia, runny nose or cold, shortness of breath, and stridor or wheezing
dIncludes black stool, bowel incontinence, constipation, diarrhea, difficulty swallowing, full stomach, gas, heartburn or acid reflux, heaving, nausea, poor appetite, vomiting, weight gain, and weight loss
eIncludes difficulty falling asleep, difficulty staying asleep, excessive sleep, nightmares, and reduced sleep quality
fIncludes coarse tongue, dry mouth, dry throat, hoarseness, mouth sores, sore gums, sore throat, vocal cord paralysis, and voice changes
gIncludes acne, burning, dry nails, dry skin, hair growth, itching, peeling, rash, sensitive skin, skin discoloration, and sores
hIncludes changes in taste, chills, dizziness, fainting, feels hot, fever, hot flashes, numbness or tingling, and vision difficulties
iIncludes frequent urinary tract infections and urinary odor
jIncludes cognitive problems, confusion, difficulty concentrating, dry eyes, hyperthyroid, low blood pressure, memory loss, menstrual changes, mentally tired, night sweats, puffy eyes, shaky, swelling, and swollen lymph nodes
Patients’ expectations of clinical trial participation: common themes
| Theme | AURA sub-study example quotationsa | ARCTIC sub-study example quotationsa |
|---|---|---|
| Hope to maintain or regain quality of life | • “I don’t know what’s going to happen. I’m expectative, and hopeful … I hope to be able to tell you [later] that my symptoms are absolutely tolerable, I’m accustomed to them, and my life is absolutely normal.” • “[I expect the treatment to] improve my breathing. Improve my feeling of well-being … [I expect] generally to feel a bit better.” • “It’s just good as it is now … the fact that it makes your daily routine possible … It would be a good treatment if it allows you to do your normal activities and to keep your job.” | • “I’m hoping it’s gonna work, is that I can build myself to be strong enough to live a standard way of life that I used to, as far as being able to work and able to not have to sleep as much.” • “I just want to live normally … I know my time is limited … I want a good quality of life, I want to be able to work, I want to be able to be coherent and know what’s going on.” • “I’m hoping that it will do me more quality of years left, I’m hoping to get another, it’d be nice if I get another 10 years.” |
| Hope that the cancer shrinks or stops growing | • “There will be a time when I develop tolerance to the treatment. Before the development of tolerance, I really wish that it will reduce my tumor and cancer cells a lot.” • “[I expect to] stop the spread of cancer. Contain it maybe is a better word.” • “My expectations, in [the] beginning [were] that it would destroy all the … cancer. Now my expectations are that it will keep the cancer under control.” | • “[I hope this drug will] shrink the tumor; I wasn’t going for a cure.” • “I hope that it doesn’t spread, and I hope that it reduces the tumors.” • “I don’t think there’s going to be a magical cure, but I think if it can shrink that tumor a bit, give me a bit more time … then I’ll be quite happy.” |
| Hope for a longer life | • “Well, my expectations are that … I’ll stay like this with the illness contained, for the longest period of time possible … All of the years I can add to this life are welcome.” | • “I am hoping for a miracle, but you know they don’t happen very often … I hope it can extend my life, if I’m being realistic.” • “I’d like the opportunity to try [the study treatment] and see if it will give me a remarkable result, because anything that keeps me alive a bit longer is probably quite good.” |
| Hope for a cure | • “After I started this treatment, my lump size is reduced so much which gave me some expectations of cure.” • “I wish it could continuously help me get better and it will cure my lung cancer eventually.” • “I hope I could get more size reduction [of tumor] with which I can expect a complete cure of cancer at the end.” | • “Obviously, everybody always hopes for an actual cure.” • “What was I hoping [this treatment] would do? Kill the cancer.” • “I thought, well maybe the job of this [treatment] stuff is to get rid of [the cancer].” |
aBracketed text indicates coder additions to clarify context
Patient descriptions of a “successful treatment”
| Theme | AURA sub-study example quotationsa | ARCTIC sub-study example quotationsa |
|---|---|---|
| Treatment that provides improved quality of life | • “A treatment that … will eventually help many others from suffering [is successful].” • “The fact that … I’m able to live a normal life is the great benefit … [I] consider this a successful treatment.” • “A successful treatment at this point … allows me to do my daily activities.” | • “My overall life, what I can do on a daily basis. I want to be able to have treatment and still be able to have some kind of a life. Where the side effects will not be limiting me.” • “It’s already successful … I’ve gotten about an increase of 60% to 70% in my energy.” |
| Treatment that makes cancer shrink or stop growing | • “A successful treatment will make your cancer cells reduced and bring you hope in a complete cure.” • “So, a successful treatment is I take these pills every day, and providing I keep taking them, the cancer doesn’t go up, it stays under control.” | • “If it’ll slow that cancer down or keep from growing, well I’d say that’d make it successful.” • “[A successful treatment is] one that could like make the cancer dormant, stop growing, or make it totally go away.” |
| Treatment that cures cancer | • “A successful treatment means cure.” • “I [consider] the chances of the cancer going [away].” | • “It’ll be wonderful if it does show that [the treatment] got rid of [the cancer].” • “[A successful treatment makes] this cancer probably disappear.” |
aBracketed text indicates coder additions to clarify context
Patient allocation of sensations to symptoms versus side effects
| Theme | AURA sub-study example quotationsa | ARCTIC sub-study example quotationsa |
|---|---|---|
| Never experienced before | • “I don’t normally have that. I didn’t have any acne before and I don’t, diarrhea was nonexistent.” • “I’ve always had skin that tended to be oily … From then on I had skin that was really dry, dehydrated, peeling, so evidently I had to associate that with the medication, I only attribute to the drug, because I didn’t have it before.” | • “The fatigue is definitely [a side effect]. I didn’t have that before.” • “Well I never had shortness of breath before like that. And this rash I never had that type of rash before.” • “It’s always like a day after where I do suffer a loose bowel I notice … which I never did before.” |
| Timing of side effect | • “I didn’t have any [hot flashes] while I was off the drug. But since I came back on them again, I’m starting to get them.” • “[I didn’t think rash was a symptom because] when they halved the dose, I felt pretty good and without any consequences.” • “Actually [I had] diarrhea twice that day after I’d taken the drug.” | • “[I attribute fatigue and constipation to treatment] because it started shortly after, as soon as I started getting treatment.” • “Anything I seem to get seems to come about three or four days after the treatment [itching, numb toes, joint pain].” • “[I attribute rash and itching to treatment because] it was the timing. After treatment … I wanted to itch every part of my body.” |
| Told by doctor it was a possibility | • “At first I didn’t know [if wrinkled fingertips] was a symptom, but … I asked whether it was a side effect and was told that it was.” • “I had mentioned it to my doctor and was told that [heat sensitivity and nail pain] are side effects from the medication.” • “I actually asked about this, and they said my hair will grow again if I stopped the medication.” | • “[I attribute itching and rash to treatment] probably because I was told that I may get it.” • “[My itchy rash] started about 2 weeks after the first treatment, and when I talked to the doctor about it he said, yes, that what you’re experiencing is one of the side effects.” • “Every time I go to the doctor, they question me and that always comes up, do I have any rashes … I’d think well it might be part of the side effects if they asked me that.” |
aBracketed text indicates coder additions to clarify context
Themes behind the balances between risk of side effects and treatment benefit
| Theme | AURA sub-study example quotationsa | ARCTIC sub-study example quotationsa |
|---|---|---|
| Focus on the fact that the treatment works | • “The side effects are very minimal so as long as the treatment is going to take care or stop this cancer, it’s no question what’s the best deal.” • “[When thinking about treatment success, I consider] progress of the shrinkage in the tumor.” • “If it continues to recede… obviously I’m going to put up with all the symptoms and side effects I get in favor of having to get rid of the cancer.” • “Because my doctor said that I’m getting better and that the size of my cancer reduced, I would take this treatment again.” | • “It’s helping me compared to what I had before, it’s well worth it.” • “If it’s doing me some good, then these side effects don’t mean anything.” • “I’ll go for the treatment, successful treatment. I don’t care if I am in pain.” • “To me, it’s worth it [trying the study treatment] … To find out if it works.” |
| Want a better quality of life | • “[Good treatment is if] I can be with my family, in my house, and even though I have some discomforts, I can get used to them.” • “[I consider] quality of life, [my] ability to do things.” • “Capability of performing normal life activities would be [one of] my considerations.” | • “I wish I were a little more physically capable, I want to eat again and gain my weight back …” • “…the least side effects I can have and still function, no matter what they are, I want to be normal.” • “I wanted to have treatment and still be able to have some kind of life.” |
| Always hopeful | • “I think the treatment is really good. I feel great physically and mentally … I can only think of the benefits of the treatment.” • “I don’t think of the negative. I just think of the positive and I’m happy with it.” | • “I don’t know if it’s in the cards but we will keep trying what we can.” • “I guess I continue for the hope.” • “You know there is going to be side effects, so you are hoping it’s gonna help.” |
| Don’t really have a choice | • “[It’s] a terminal [illness] and quite a big illness … I didn’t feel like I had a lot choice [regarding treatment] … there’s not hesitation.” • “I would want to continue with the current treatment. And there are no other treatment options available for me.” • “I really don’t have a choice at this point, so I can’t complain about the small things now … the side effects are okay if you weigh the pros and cons.” | • “You don’t have a choice [about side effects]. The only choice is you’re not living very long if you don’t take up the trial.” • “I suppose the alternative is death, you are between a rock and a hard place.” • “I felt I had nothing to lose.” • “I didn’t have any options, this was my last opportunity to try something new, so I didn’t worry about it.” |
| Don’t think about side effects | • “[Side effects are] not a problem. I am willing to go along with these little side effects as long as it is working and keeping me going.” | • “I’m quite a positive person, I don’t look at the down side of things.” • “I’m not the least bit negative, so side effects was the least of my worries.” • “I didn’t think a thing about the side effects, I didn’t pay attention to it at all.” |
aBracketed text indicates coder additions to clarify context