| Literature DB >> 35058235 |
Michaela Senek1, Steve Robertson2, Liz Darlison3, Lorraine Creech3, Angela Tod2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Malignant mesothelioma is an aggressive malignancy of mesothelial surfaces, most commonly those of the pleura. The aim of this study was to understand, using a national questionnaire, the gendered care experiences of patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM).Patients were asked about their experience of the diagnostic process, about information clarity, health care professionals' knowledge, general practitioner support and overall satisfaction with care received.Entities:
Keywords: asbestos induced lung disease; lung cancer; mesothelioma
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35058235 PMCID: PMC8783831 DOI: 10.1136/bmjresp-2021-001050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Respir Res ISSN: 2052-4439
Patients’ age by gender
| Age | Men | Women |
| 50 or less | N=3 (0.8%) | N=3 (3.7%) |
| 51–55 | 5 (1.3%) | N=3 (3.7%) |
| 56–60 | N=15 (4%) | N=3 (3.7%) |
| 61–65 | N=45 (12%) *18.1%≤65 | N=12 (14.8%) *25.9%≥65 |
| 66–70 | N=77 (20.5%) | N=14 (17.3%) |
| 70+ | N=230 (61.3%) | N=46 (56.8%) |
Summary table of the diagnostic experience
| MPM diagnostic process | ||||
| No | Yes | X², p value | Total | |
| Was the explanation of the mesothelioma diagnosis understandable | 176 | 283 | (1)=1.548, 0.257 | 459 |
| 38.30% | 61.70% | |||
| (44.4% women, 37.1% men) | ||||
| Was the explanation given in sensitive way | 126 | 332 | (1)=0.638, 0.681 | 458 |
| Sensitivity | 27.50% | 72.50% | ||
| (29.6% women, 26.7% men) | ||||
| Were you told that a multidisciplinary team had reviewed your case. | 106 | 250 | (1)=1.498, 0.148 | 356 |
| 29.80% | 70.20% | |||
| (32.7% women, 22.3% men) | ||||
| Did healthcare professionals have sufficient knowledge and know enough about your condition | 115 | 344 | (1)=0.786, 0.778 | 459 |
| Knowledge | 25.10% | 74.90% | ||
| (26.3% women, 24.7% men) | ||||
| Did you receive good support from your GP in relation to your diagnosis | 252 | 199 | (1)=0.675, 0.727 | 451 |
| GP support | 55.90% | 44.10% | ||
| (54.8% women, 55.1%) | ||||
| Were you overall satisfied with healthcare professionals during your diagnosis | 92 | 364 | (1)=0.845, 0.857 | 456 |
| Overall satisfaction | 20.20% | 79.80% | ||
| (21.5% women and 19.8% men) | ||||
GP, general practitioner; MPM, malignant pleural mesothelioma.
Occupational category and time from symptom to diagnosis
| Occupation/source of exposure, time from symptom to diagnosis (median, days) | Men | Women | P value |
| Construction (builder, electrician, plumber, carpenter, lagger) | 49.6%, (N=188), 92 days, IQR=50–81 | There were no women in this category. | Not applicable |
| Work environment (teacher, doctor, nurse, secretarial, admin) | 2.6%, (N=10), 97 days, IQR=35–90 | 17.3%, (N=14), 396 days, IQR=58.75–80.75 | 0.47 |
| No occupation listed because assumed/could not prove that was exposed at work | 24% (N=91), 90 days, IQR=50–77.5 | 67.9%, (N=55), 151 days, IQR=60–80 | 0.076 |
| Other | 23.7%, (N=90), 92 days, IQR=50.75–85 | 14.8%, (N=12), 169 days, (IQR=80–95.25) | 0.05* |
*Significant.
Quality of life (QoL) score by treatment type received
| Treatment received | Men | Women | Satisfaction rate with treatment |
| Surgery | 75 | 77.5 | 83.9% |
| Chemotherapy | 70 | 70 | 86.9% |
| Radiotherapy | 60 | 68.5 | 81.1% |
| Immunotherapy | 75 | 70 | 92.7% |
| Targeted therapy | 67.8 | 82.5 | 75% |
| None | 60 | 67 | 85% |
Patients’ experience of the treatment
| Treatment-related question | MPM treatment process | ||
| Yes (%) | No (%) | Total | |
| Satisfaction with treatment (yes/no)* | (n=380) 83.7% | (n=74) 16.3% | Total=460 |
| Perception that health professionals had sufficient knowledge (yes/no) | (n=396) 86.5% | (n=62) 13.5% | Total=458 |
| Breathlessness controlled (yes/no)* | (n=209) 68.5% | (n=96) 38.5% | Total=305 |
| Fatigue controlled (yes/no)* | (n=154) 53.1% | (n=136) 46.9% | Total=290 |
| Coughing controlled* | (n=103) 53.3% | (n=94) 47.7% | Total=197 |
| Pain controlled* | (n=218) 77.6% | (n=63) 22.4% | 281 |
*None of the treatment processes were statistically significantly different between men and women.
MPM, malignant pleural mesothelioma.