| Literature DB >> 34383226 |
Mona L Martin1,2, Helena Chung3, Anna Rydén4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Immunotherapy is an evolving therapeutic approach for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). This study explored factors involved in patients' perceptions about reporting or not reporting treatment-related symptoms experienced while undergoing immunotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: Immunotherapy; Interviews; Non-small cell lung cancer; Qualitative research; Symptoms
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34383226 PMCID: PMC8960557 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-021-02966-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Demographic, health-related, and NSCLC-related characteristics
| Characteristic | All patients ( |
|---|---|
| Age, years, mean (SD) [range] | 61.6 (9.3) [39–88] |
| Male, | 36 (54.5) |
| Patient-reported overall health, | |
| Excellent | 4 (6.1) |
| Very good | 20 (30.3) |
| Good | 21 (31.8) |
| Fair | 17 (25.8) |
| Poor | 3 (4.5) |
| Unknown/missing | 1 (1.5) |
| Time since NSCLC diagnosis, years, mean (SD) [range] | 3.1 (2.2) [0.1–10.1] |
| Stage of NSCLC at diagnosis, | |
| I | 2 (3.0) |
| II | 4 (6.1) |
| III | 15 (22.7) |
| IV | 43 (65.2) |
| Unknown/missing | 2 (3.0) |
| Current stage of NSCLC, | |
| I | 1 (1.5) |
| II | 1 (1.5) |
| III | 2 (3.0) |
| IV | 60 (91.0) |
| Unknown/missing | 2 (3.0) |
| Metastases from lung (if known), | 50 (75.8) |
| Cancer treatments received, | |
| Surgery | 20 (30.3) |
| Radiation therapy | 37 (56.1) |
| Chemotherapy | 51 (77.3) |
| Targeted therapy | 8 (12.1) |
| IO therapy | 66 (100) |
| Type of IO therapy, | |
| Monotherapy | 49 (74.2) |
| Combination therapy | 9 (13.6) |
| Unknown/missing | 8 (12.1) |
| Experienced side effects with IO therapy (if known), | 32 (48.5) |
IO immuno-oncology, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, SD standard deviation
Treatment-related symptoms patients experienced and had reasons for not reporting
| Symptom/side effect category | Geographical region | Social media use | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USA ( | Europe ( | Low ( | High ( | |
| Energy-related | 4 (13) | 4 (11) | 5 (11) | 3 (14) |
| Pain and discomfort | 2 (7) | 2 (6) | 3 (7) | 7 (32) |
| Respiratory | 6 (20) | 5 (14) | 8 (18) | 3 (14) |
| GI-related | 5 (17) | 10 (28) | 10 (23) | 5 (23) |
| Urinary/bladder-related | 2 (7) | 1 (3) | 3 (7) | 0 (0) |
| Systemic | 2 (7) | 3 (8) | 4 (9) | 4 (18) |
| Sleep disturbances | 2 (7) | 3 (8) | 5 (11) | 0 (0) |
| Ocular | 1 (3) | 1 (3) | 1 (2) | 1 (5) |
| Cognitive | 1 (3) | 3 (8) | 4 (9) | 0 (0) |
| Othera | 10 (33) | 12 (33) | 14 (32) | 8 (36) |
GI gastrointestinal
aOther symptoms not reported in this table included: anemia, anxiety, bruising, drooling, hair changes, hair loss, inability to eat certain foods, itching, nail problems, neuropathy/numbness, range of motion issues, rash, ruined veins, sensitivity to sun, sexual issues, skin problems, swelling, unable to grip objects, vaginal bleeding, and vaginal dryness
Patient-reported reasons for not reporting treatment-related symptoms
| Reason for not reporting symptoms | Patient expressions ( | Example patient quotations |
|---|---|---|
| Insignificant | 11 (44) | “I guess thinking it’s just kind of trivial” “If it wasn’t bothering me much…I didn’t see any reason to report it” “If I’m not bothered by it…If I can live with it” “I felt as if it’s not important to report, it might just be normal” |
| Not sure what was going on | 4 (16) | “…if I knew where it comes from…” “It was nothing very specific” “I didn’t really think of the medication at first, I didn’t know what was going on” |
| Can take care of it myself | 3 (12) | “I thought I could take care of it myself” “Something feels trivial to me, that I can manage myself” “It might not be related to the pathology, so I may be able to find a solution on my own” |
| Fear of being taken off treatment | 3 (12) | “Afraid of being switched to another cancer drug” “Fear of them taking me off [xx], because I don’t really want to stop because it’s holding everything steady right now” |
| Forgetfulness | 2 (8) | “I forgot to mention it” “Forgetfulness is really the reason I wouldn’t report a side effect” |
| Healthcare team can’t do anything about it | 2 (8) | “They can’t do anything about it…or it’s too personal” “I’m pretty sure there is nothing they can do about it” |
Patient-reported reasons for reporting treatment-related symptoms
| Reason for reporting symptoms | Patient expressions | Example patient quotations |
|---|---|---|
| To find out what was going on; was it normal? | 14 (34) | “Just because I would like to know if it’s normal or not normal from the chemo” “When I notice something different, I want to know why” “I want to make sure everything is going to be alright” “I would want further investigations or reassurance” |
| Because my healthcare team needs to know | 8 (20) | “I just tell them, so they know what I am going through” “I want them to know I have these things so they can document it” “If anything at all is wrong with me, I tell them” |
| It was an identified side effect they were supposed to report if it happened | 6 (15) | “They continually say ‘if you are feeling anything or you are sick, call right away’” “My duty to report and see if those are side effects of the medication” “If you don’t tell them the truth, they cannot help you” |
| The severity | 5 (12) | “If it gives me problems, I would tell” “Extreme pain and discomfort” “The pain, I’m scared of pain” |
| To see if it could be fixed | 5 (12) | “To find out what’s going on and get it fixed” “Looking for some relief” “To see if it can be stopped” |
| Impact on my life | 3 (7) | “They are impacting my lifestyle” “How detrimental they are to your daily activities” |
Patient views about balancing treatment-related symptoms with treatment benefits
| “[It’s] keeping me alive… I’d rather for it to be going slow with [treatment] than too fast without [treatment]” |
| “On [treatment] you take a risk of falling, losing your balance…but it’s either that or die with cancer” |
| “Simply the cancer that I have, I don’t know too many people that live from prostate cancer, so, yes, I want to survive” |
| “[My thinking was] let’s say that I have 6 months to live. And I go through this treatment and I’ve got another 6 months to live, but I’m so sick during those 6 months that it’s not worth…being alive, then I don’t want to do it” |
“[They say] this could happen and that could happen…they don’t say it will. So, if it could happen, but if it doesn’t—it doesn’t. And that’s basically how I weighed in …I just realize that I have to go through what I’m going through because it’s going to make me better…” |
| “I'm hoping that the benefit is that it goes into remission and that I don’t have to worry about it anymore…hoping that we can get rid of it” |
| “I decided okay, the only way to find out is to try this and hope that it works out. It did not for my dad… And I thought, okay I owe it to my wife, my son, my friends” |
| “I think that if we have something that’s shown to be a good solution to a problem, that I would try it…and it depends on how severe the side effects would be” |
| “It also to me depends on what stage of a disease I’m in. If I’m totally bedridden on machines and the chance that some drug might give me six extra months, that’s not worth it to me… But if I’m in the normal life… there are drugs that have helped people live an extra 3, 5, 10 years or even go into remission and not have symptoms come back” |
| “The benefits far outweigh the side effects…way far outweigh…if I’d been diagnosed with stage III lung cancer 4 years ago, I’d be dead now [because the treatment wasn’t available]” |
| “The fact that I know that I got through it before and I know that I’m going to get through it now and I’m going to get better. So, I just hang in there and just go with it” |
| “The side effects it’s kind of irritating, but I can deal with it…I’m breathing on my own now. So, the chemo is coming along beautifully” |
| “Well I didn’t have any other treatments to compare it to, it was what we started with…I think it’s great. I can totally function again” |
| “Well, it depends probably what the side effects are, right, is it going to hamper me and what I’m trying to do, is it going to make me live longer, what are the benefits?” |
| “Well put this way, [treatment] is keeping me alive” |
| “Yes, I want to live so I have no choice but to take the treatment” |
| “…I was a little fearful about it…side effects…I just decided that was probably the best route to go and if that worked then it’s worth it” |
| “[I thought about potential side effects] only so much as you can imagine in your mind what they’re telling you what to expect. Until you’ve lived it, it’s just words on paper. You don’t know…what chemotherapy nausea is like…not like any nausea you’ve ever had before” |
| “Absolutely, I look at [side effects but] when you get a condition like cancer, I just put complete faith in the medical profession” |
| “I am not interested in the side effects at the start. I’m more interested in the treatment which is supposed to make me feel better. I judge the treatment basically, not the side effects” |
| “I just tell myself that I must not think about the side effects straight away [and do treatment to be healed]” |
| “I’m always told that there was a risk, I knew the risk. I was ready to take that risk, I didn’t really have a choice” |
| “I’ve got to go for it…I’m quite willing to try anything [despite side effects]…when they tell you that there’s activity again you’ve got to go for it…it’s not really an option” |
| “I’d made up my mind that it’s [beneficial] even in spite of the side effects…it’s pretty much a no-lose gamble” |