| Literature DB >> 34287250 |
Kirsti I Toivonen1, Devesh Oberoi2, Kathryn King-Shier3, Katherine-Ann L Piedalue2, Joshua A Rash4, Linda E Carlson2, Tavis S Campbell1.
Abstract
Adjuvant endocrine therapy (AET) is recommended after hormone receptor-positive breast cancer to reduce risk of recurrence, but adherence is sub-optimal in many women. Behavioral interventions have been ineffective in improving adherence rates to AET. This qualitative descriptive study investigates factors that support women in AET use and suggestions for interventions to improve AET use and management. Interviews with women who persisted with AET (n = 23), women who discontinued AET (n = 15), and healthcare providers (HCPs; oncologists, oncology residents, and pharmacists; n = 9) were conducted, transcribed, and described using thematic analysis. Data collection stopped once saturation occurred (i.e., no new codes or themes emerged during interviews). Two researchers created codes and developed themes in an iterative process; a third researcher verified the representativeness of final themes. This study was approved by the Health Research Ethics Board of Alberta (ID: HREBA.CC-17-0513). Women who persisted described being prepared for side effects and having self-management strategies, strong rationale for AET use, supportive HCPs, and available resources as relevant factors. Women who discontinued described feeling overwhelmed by side effects, information needs, drawbacks of AET, helpful/unhelpful experiences with HCPs, and contextual factors as relevant to their discontinuation. HCPs described health system-related and patient-related barriers, side effect management, and patient-provider interactions as relevant to supporting AET use. The considerable overlap in themes among the three groups suggests broad recognition of salient factors relevant to AET use and that associated strategies to improve use may be acceptable to patients and providers alike. Factors supporting AET use could include the following: education (which may be necessary but insufficient), developing a strong personal rationale for use, being prepared for side effects, having side effect management strategies, reciprocal communication between patients and HCPs, and accessible resources.Entities:
Keywords: adjuvant endocrine therapy; breast cancer; persistence; qualitative
Year: 2021 PMID: 34287250 PMCID: PMC8293219 DOI: 10.3390/curroncol28040227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol ISSN: 1198-0052 Impact factor: 3.677
Demographic information for women who persisted (n = 23) and discontinued (n = 15).
| Demographic | Women Who Persisted | Women Who Discontinued |
|---|---|---|
| M(SD) | ||
| Age | 55.96 (8.48) | 64.33 (7.59) |
| Education (years) | 14.65 (2.29) | 13.93 (1.64) |
| Years since diagnosis | 2.59 (1.88) | 3.67 (1.68) |
| %( | ||
| Ethnicity | ||
| White | 82.6 (19) | 93.3 (14) |
| Asian | 13.0 (3) | 6.7 (1) |
| Mixed ethnic background | 4.3 (1) | - |
| Cancer stage | ||
| 0 | - | 7.7 (1) |
| 1 | 40.9 (9) | 30.8 (4) |
| 2 | 36.3 (8) | 46.2 (6) |
| 3 | 18.2 (4) | 15.4 (2) |
| 4 | 4.5 (1) | - |
| Primary treatment | ||
| Chemotherapy | 63.6 (14) | 40.0 (6) |
| Radiotherapy | 63.6 (14) | 53.3 (8) |
| Surgery | 100 (23) | 66.7 (10) |
| Current AET | ||
| Aromatase inhibitor | 52.2 (12) | - |
| Tamoxifen | 47.8 (11) | - |
| AETs used | ||
| Aromatase inhibitor | - | 26.7 (4) |
| Tamoxifen | - | 13.3 (2) |
| Both | - | 60.0 (9) |
AET = adjuvant endocrine therapy.
Additional quotes from women who persisted.
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| Side Effects |
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Additional quotes from women who discontinued.
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| Unmanageable side effects |
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Additional quotes from healthcare providers.
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Comparison of themes across groups.
| Themes | Women Who Persisted with AET ( | Women Who Discontinued AET ( | Healthcare Providers Who Manage AET ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Side effects | Women were prepared to deal with side effects | Side effects were overwhelming and interfered with quality of life | Side effects are a key factor associated with AET discontinuation |
| Side effect management strategies | Women had strategies to successfully manage side effects (e.g., exercise) | Women were unable to find effective side effect management strategies | HCPs recommended behavioural (e.g., exercise) and pharmacological strategies |
| Information | Women wanted more, detailed, relevant, and understandable information | HCPs viewed providing information as a key strategy for promoting AET use | |
| Thoughts related to AET use | Women emphasized the life-saving potential of AET and personal reasons for use | Women emphasized that AET was not guaranteed to work and feared long-term effects (e.g., bone loss) | HCPs recognized patients could have pre-existing negative bias toward AET |
| Communication with healthcare providers | Supportive HCPs could be a key factor in continuing AET | Women appreciated autonomy; they were frustrated when they perceived HCPs as rushed or un-responsive | Communication needs to be reciprocal to be effective |
| Experiences with the healthcare system | Resources were available to support women in AET use | Healthcare system constraints make it difficult for HCPs to address concerns thoroughly | |
| Contextual factors | Being older, pre-existing illness, and having to work could make AET seem less worthwhile | Peripheral out-of-pocket costs could still impact AET use |
AET = adjuvant endocrine therapy, HCP = healthcare provider.
Figure 1Factors supporting adjuvant endocrine therapy use and potential interventions. Factors are based on interviews with women who persisted, women who discontinued, and healthcare providers. Potential behavioural intervention components worth investigation are mapped onto each factor. Interventions could occur at the individual-, provider-, or system-level. AET = adjuvant endocrine therapy, HCP = healthcare provider, PCP = primary care provider.