| Literature DB >> 35693193 |
Roshan Sutar1, Pooja Chaudhary2.
Abstract
Background: Collusion in cancer care is the diplomatic concealment of information between a triad of the health care professional (HCP), patient, and caregiver. Free and expressive communication is determined by multiple factors, which establishes a healthy balance between 'patient-centric' and 'family-centric' decision making. The lack of a universal approach to prognostic disclosure techniques emphasizes the need for a systematic review of contemporary practice.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; collusion; communication; disclosure; techniques
Year: 2022 PMID: 35693193 PMCID: PMC9178750 DOI: 10.1177/26323524221101077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Palliat Care Soc Pract ISSN: 2632-3524
Figure 1.PRISMA flowchart of the review.
Characteristics of the studies included in the systematic review.
| Authors | Country and setting | Study design | Sample size | Cancer diagnosis/site | Disclosure tools/techniques used/developed (time duration, length, and details of disclosure technique) | Professionals involved in the disclosure | The objective of the study and key information obtained regarding prognostic disclosure | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Sutar | South India, Palliative care | Observational mixed method | 124 | Multiple cancer | A newly developed 14 items collusion questionnaires (patient version and caregiver version) was administered using a FRIENDS protocol | Psychiatrists | Identify reservations about disclosing information to patients and caregivers and identify collusion. Perceived ill effects of information on patient and caregiver from vice versa perspectives. |
| 2. | von Blanckenburg | Germany, Inpatient and outpatient of a university hospital | Qualitative study | 336 | Multiple | Interviews leading to the development of The Marburg Breaking Bad News Scale (MABBAN) | NS | To develop a questionnaire based on the SPIKES protocol to detect patients’ preferences for breaking bad news communication. |
| 3. | Chittem | India, Outpatient, Hospital | Mixed-method study | 15 | Multiple | Interview with semi-structured tool – digital audio recording. | NS | To explore the reasons and experience of caregivers on disclosure |
| 4. | Ilan and Carmel
| Israel, Community clinics | Cross-sectional study | 251 | Not specified | Face-to-face interview | NS | To develop a tool for evaluating patients’ communication patterns. |
| 5. | Costantini | Italy, Community | Retrospective mortality follow-back survey | 1271 | Digestive, respiratory, or genitourinary system cancer | Semi-structured interview with the caregiver guided by Adapted version of the Views of Informal Carers – Evaluation of Services (VOICES) questionnaire | Physicians, nurses, social workers, and psychologists | Estimating the probability of cancer patients being informed of their diagnosis, prognosis, and exploring circumstances around the disclosure. |
| 6. | Tang and Lee
| Taiwan, Multicenter, Inpatient, Hospital | Mixed-method study | 364 | Not specified | Semi-structured interviews, developed a new Interview schedule for diagnosis and prognosis associated collusion | Medical and surgical oncologist | To explore preferences of information and attitudes toward disclosing information related to diagnosis and prognosis from health care professionals to family and from family to patient from the patient’s point of view. |
| 7. | Crooks
| Canada, Outpatient, Hospital | Review of literature with qualitative study | 20 | Women with stage I or II breast cancer diagnosed after age 65 | Interview | Researcher, clinician | Contributions of grounded theory research to new understandings of the cancer experience for older women. |
| 8. | Harding | South India, Palliative care | Cross-sectional qualitative study | 20 | Advanced cancer | Semi-structured questionnaire | Oncologists, psychiatric social workers, and clinical psychologist | To develop an explanatory evidence-based model of stigma, communication, and access to cancer palliative care in India that can be used to develop, test, and implement future interventions. |
| 9. | Nayak | India, Outpatient, Hospital | Intervention study and a Survey | 400 | Not specified | 8 item questionnaires prompting yes and no answers. | Trained nurses | To assess cancer patients’ perception of the quality of communication before and after the implementation of a communication strategy. |
| 10. | Bergqvist and Strang
| Sweden, Palliative care | Cross-sectional qualitative study | 20 | Metastatic breast cancer | Semi-guided face-to-face interviews (tape-recorded and transcribed verbatim) | Oncologist, pathologist | To explore breast cancer patients’ preferences and perceptions of patient–doctor communication regarding continuous late lines of palliative chemotherapy. |
| 11. | Robinson | USA, Multicenter, Outpatient, Hospital | Cross-sectional study | 198 | Not specified | Audiotaped recordings of communication between oncologists and patients | Oncologists (Medical, hematological, gynecological, radiotherapy) | To identify the communication factors that influence patient–oncologist concordance about the chance of cure [baseline phase of the Studying Communication in Oncologist Patient Encounters (SCOPE) trial]. |
| 12. | Piredda | Italy, Inpatient, Hospital | Cross-sectional survey | 120 | NS | 11-item structured questionnaire covering information about the disease, chances of recovery, possible treatments, a side effect of chemotherapy, and the trajectory of illness | Researchers | To assess patients’ attitudes toward disclosure of information. |
| 13. | Hoff and Hermerén
| Sweden, Inpatient, Hospital | Qualitative study | 12 | 7 patients with malignant hematological diseases, 5 patients with inoperable lung cancer diseases. | Semi-structured interview | Researcher | To study obstacles and awareness of information disclosure. |
| 14. | Rosenberg | USA, Outpatient, Hospital | RCT | 30 | Prostate cancer | Expressive disclosure through writing | Oncologist | To explore the feasibility and the efficacy of a brief, well-defined psychosocial intervention (expressive disclosure) and compare with controls. |
| 15. | The | Netherlands, Inpatient, Hospital | A qualitative observational (ethnographic) study | 35 patients | Small cell lung cancer | Full-time observation of the patient during ward admission, home visits, and formal interviews | Doctor and nurses | To discover and explore the factors that result in ‘false optimism about recovery’. |
| 16. | Nejati | Taiwan, Four teaching hospitals | Prospective longitudinal study | 276 | Multiple myeloma | Self-reported pattern using eHealth Literacy Scale (eHEALS), Multidimensional Trust in Health Care Systems | Physician | To identify determinants of shared decision making in patients with multiple myeloma (MM) to facilitate the design of a program to maximize the effects of shared decision making. |
| 17. | Ghoshal | India, Outpatient, hospital | Qualitative | 500 | Not specified | Pre-validated, close-ended preference questions and were interviewed for open-ended attitude questions | Two research assistants | To understand the preferences and attitudes of patients and family caregivers on disclosure of cancer diagnosis and prognosis in an Indian setting. |
| 18. | Victor | India, Palliative care | Cross-sectional qualitative | 200 | Not specified | Semi-structured questionnaire guided by European Organization for research and treatment of cancer QOL Questionnaire-C30 | Treating physician | To determine the prevalence of collusion and its influence on the quality of life (QOL) among patients in palliative care |
| 19. | Reinert | Germany, Hospital | Cross-sectional study | 314 | Brain tumor | Self-assessment questionnaire ranged into five clusters (diagnosis, treatment, living with cancer, additional support, and legal issues) | NS | To evaluate and investigate the information needs, information behavior, level of information on patients and their relatives. |
| 20. | Diamond | USA, Inpatient, Hospital | Mixed-methods exploratory study | 82 | Malignant glioma | Audio-recorded semi-structured assessment in a private, quiet, and uninterrupted setting. | One of the three trained members of the study team | To explore associations between neurocognitive function and patterns of prognostic awareness and communication preferences. |
| 21. | Nakajima | Japan, Sapporo, Hokkaido | Observational pre-post design | 91 | Multiple | More detailed information based on the SPIKES and Support Team Assessment Schedule (Japanese version) | Researchers | To examine whether disclosing more detailed information about disease progression to terminally ill patients could improve the quality of communication. |
| 22. | Haun | Germany, | Cross-sectional survey | 378 | Multiple | Distress (QSC-R10), Perception of the patients’ degree of disclosure regarding cancer-relevant topics (CCAT-F Disclosure subscale), caregiver strain (CSI), and unmet needs (SCNS-P&C) | Physician | To assess the impact of caregivers’ perceived nondisclosure by the patients. |
| 23. | Abdul-Razzak | Canada, Palliative care | Multicenter interpretive description study | 16 | NS | Semi-structured, one-on-one interviews | Researcher | To understand patients’ preferences for physician behaviors during end-of-life communication. |
| 24. | Zamanzadeh | Iran, East Azerbaijan Province, Community | Qualitative | 38 | NS | Semi-structured, in-depth interviews which were tape-recorded and transcribed verbatim | Researcher | To describe the experiences of cancer disclosure by cancer patients, their family members, and physicians. |
| 25. | Nakajima | Japan, Palliative care | Retrospective | 87 | NS | Support Team Assessment Schedule-Japanese (STAS-J), a tool for palliative care audit | Physician and nurses | To examine the relationship between informing patients of cancer and the quality of terminal care. Four categories defined: ‘nondisclosure of cancer diagnosis’, ‘disclosure of the cancer diagnosis’, ‘disclosure of the life-threatening diagnosis’, and ‘disclosure of poor prognosis’ |
| 26. | Back and Huak
| Singapore, Outpatient, Hospital | Prospective audit | 369 | Multiple | Therapeutic interview (two interviews were conducted in case of incomplete data) | Single radiation oncologist, patient, and caregivers | To study the extent of nondisclosure and factors associated with it in cancer patients. |
| 27. | Roscoe | USA, South Florida, Head and neck oncology clinic | Qualitative | 14 | End-stage head and neck cancer | In-person/telephonic interview based University of Washington School of Medicine Quality of Communication Questionnaire (QOC) based structured questionnaire | Researcher | To find the ability to communicate with patients and their willingness to discuss specific aspects of end-of-life care. |
| 28. | Mitchison | Australia, Outpatient, Hospital oncology clinic | Qualitative exploratory study | 73 | Metastatic cancer | Structured interview guided by questions based on the prognostic literature | Doctors | To describe the pattern of communication between oncologists and migrant cancer patients. |
| 29. | Valizadeh | Iran, Inpatient, outpatient clinics, and physicians’ offices, hospital | Qualitative | 20 | Breast cancer | The in-depth semi-structured interview which was audiotaped and transcribed in verbatim | Researcher | To understand and assess the need for changes in current patient and health care provider education. |
| 30. | Seth
| North India, | Qualitative study-survey | 25 | Acute lymphoblastic leukemia | Simple questionnaire formulated using WHO guidelines | Health care provider | To evaluate parental views on the participation of children in prognostic disclosure, decision making for treatment, and beliefs and practices for palliative care. |
| 31. | Jeba | South India, Palliative care | Retrospective study | 306 | Not specified | Health care records | Researcher | To study factors contributing to collusion in patients who had visited palliative care OPD at least 3 times with follow-up until death. |
| 32. | Kao and Goh
| Singapore, Hospice home care | A retrospective comparison with the cohort of Tay | 100 | Advanced cancer | Chart review using Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status | Physician | To determine the rate of nondisclosure to patients. |
| 33. | Kirwan | The United Kingdom, Inpatient, Hospital | Cross-sectional observational study | 359 patients | Epithelial ovarian cancer | Hospital record of patients regarding communication of the cancer diagnosis and treatment. | NS | To understand how doctors record-breaking bad news in ovarian cancers. |
| 34. | Huang | Australia, Teaching hospitals, and cancer support organization | Qualitative | 48 | Multiple | Focused group discussion, telephonic interviews guided by Rissel Acculturation Scale | Psychiatrist | To identify attitudes toward cancer and associated information and communication needs of Chinese patients and their relatives in Sydney. |
| 35. | Schroy | USA, Boston, Community | Quasi-randomized design | 315 | Colorectal adenoma | Brief, computer-based educational program (CBEP personalized letter (PL), and generic letter (standard care). | Research assistant | To determine whether a brief, computer-based educational program (CBEP) administered alone after polypectomy, or in combination with a personalized letter (PL), was more effective than standard care (SC) for heightening awareness and improving risk communication. |
| 36. | Claflin and Barbarin
| USA, Community | Qualitative longitudinal | 43 children | Multiple | Children were interviewed after completion of a group family interview. | NS | To address the information disclosure from the perspective of children diagnosed with cancer. |
| 37. | Clemente
| Spain, Inpatient, Hospital and house | Qualitative/ethnographic | 17 | Not specified | Daily participant observation of medical and social activities, biographical questionnaires, unstructured and semi-structured interviews, and video recording | Clinicians and nurses | To explore clinicians’ practices of partial information disclosure to adolescents with cancer. |
| 38. | Liu | China. Tertiary hospital | Prospective cohort study | 248 | Not specified | A self-designed questionnaire following a semi-structured interview. | Clinician | To investigate the disclosure incidence of cancer diagnosis to patients before chemotherapy, to survey the attitudes of the patients and their families and related influencing factors toward disclosure of cancer diagnosis, and to compare the anxiety and depression levels between the disclosure and nondisclosure patients. |
| 39. | Ross | Denmark, Outpatient, Hospital | Cross-sectional study | 61 | Multiple | Telephonic interview using 8-item Cancer Patient’s World Questionnaire (CPWQ) | Psychologist, trained interviewer, and medical professionals | To develop and validate a short instrument assessing the patients’ perception of communication with health care staff. |
| 40. | Marwit and Datson
| USA, Community | Survey | 26 women and 86 male | Not specified | Mail questionnaire packet containing Social Support Appraisals Scale, Miller Behavioral Style Scale, The Costello-Comrey Anxiety Scale, Hardiness Scale, short form and Belief in Personal Control Scale | NS | To find out the disclosure preferences and pathways through a stepwise disclosure protocol to break barriers to collusion. |
| 41. | Morita | Japan, Palliative care and Hospital | Multicenter questionnaire survey | 318 | Not specified | Questionnaires mailed to bereaved family members | NS | To clarify the family-reported degree of emotional distress and the necessity for improvement in communication methods when communicating about the ending of anticancer treatment, and to identify factors contributing to the levels of emotional distress and the necessity for improvement. |
| 42. | Ruland | Norway, Community | Randomized control trial | 325 | Breast cancer and prostate cancer | Mailed questionnaire | NS | To examine the effects of WebChoice on symptom distress (primary outcome), depression, self-efficacy, health-related quality of life, and social support (secondary outcomes). The experimental group had access to WebChoice and the control group received URLs of publicly available cancer Web sites. |
| 43. | Jones | Australia, Victoria, Community | Cross-sectional study | 154 | NS | Supportive care interviews followed by experiential interviews guided by National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Distress Thermometer and Problem List | Clinician and researcher | To evaluate the role of supportive care interviews in terms of improving the communication gap. |
| 44. | Gan | China, Hospital and Community | Mixed-method study | 2183 | Not specified | In-depth interview guided by Disclosing Diagnosis Questionnaire (DDQ). | Oncologist, researchers | To explore attitudes toward truth-telling practice among physicians, patients, patients’ family members, and the general population, and reasons for nondisclosure. |
| 45. | Buzaglo | USA, Outpatient, Fox Chase Cancer Center, a National Cancer Institute | Qualitative | 46 | Metastatic solid tumor | New tool (web-based) developed based on Quality and Quantity of life | NS | A pilot study to develop an Internet-based method to assess cancer patient information needs and enhance doctor–patient communication |
| 46. | Ingersoll | USA, palliative care | Cross-sectional study | 282 | Multiple advanced cancer | Audio recorded interview and consultation | Palliative care clinicians and nurses | To examine whether conversations involving Black or Latino patients with advanced cancer differ in the presence or characteristics of 6prognosis communication. |
| 47. | Bachner | Israel, Home hospice unit | Descriptive correlational study | 77 | Multiple | Illness and Death Scale, General Self-Efficacy Scale, Maslach Burnout Inventory, Short Geriatric Depression Scale | NS | To compares the level of open communication between caregivers from two ethnic groups and examine the contribution of different caregiver characteristics and situational variables to the explanation of open communication. |
| 48. | Thorne | Canada, Outpatient, Hospital | Qualitative longitudinal | 125 | Multiple | Face-to-face initial individual interviews followed by an ongoing series of bimonthly face-to-face or telephone interviews | NS | To understand helpful and unhelpful communication from the patient perspective and to document changes in patient needs and priorities over time. |
| 49. | Ross | Denmark, Community | Cross-sectional survey | 1490 | Multiple | Self-reported 8-item Cancer Patient’s World Questionnaire, CPWQ | NS | To access how communication with health care staff is perceived by cancer patients and to categorize those patients who report a problem in communication. |
| 50. | Hack | Canada, Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg, Outpatient | Qualitative | 173 | Prostate cancer | Audiotaped clinical encounter | Clinical research nurse | To explicate the content of primary adjuvant treatment consultations in breast oncology and examine the predictive relationships between patient and oncologist consultation factors and patient satisfaction with communication |
| 51. | Miura | Japan, Inpatient, Hospital | Qualitative study | 229 | Primary lung cancer | Interview | Patient, caregiver, and physician | To assess current trends in disclosure of lung cancer to patients. |