Treatment decision-making among patients with metastatic prostate cancer: Impact of decision locus of control on functional outcomes and decision satisfaction

Author:

Morgans Alicia1ORCID,Schumacher Frank2,Helenowski Irene2,Sun Zequn2,Oswald Laura3,Gonzalez Brian3,Moses Kelvin,Benning James2

Affiliation:

1. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

2. Feinberg School of Medicine

3. Moffitt Cancer Center

Abstract

Abstract Background Shared decision-making (SDM) for metastatic prostate cancer (mPC) engages patients in the decision-making process and may be associated with better outcomes relative to physician- or patient-directed decision-making. We assessed the association between decision locus of control (DLOC) and patient-reported quality of life (QOL), functional outcomes, and decision satisfaction among mPC patients. Methods After a clinic visit in which a treatment decision was made (baseline), mPC patients completed DLOC and QOL surveys. QOL was re-assessed at 2- and 4-months post-baseline. Mean scores for each QOL dimension (physical, emotional, cognitive, social, and role functioning) were compared by DLOC group using mixed effects models. Patient preferences for DLOC and provider communication techniques were similarly collected via survey. Results Median age of participants (N = 101) was 69 years (range: 49–92); most were White (80%) and married (82%). 62% reported using SDM. At baseline, there were no differences in QOL dimensions between DLOC groups. At 4 months, patient-directed (p = 0.01) and SDM (p = 0.03) were associated with better physical functioning than physician-directed decision-making, and there was a trend toward greater decision satisfaction among patients who reported patient-directed (p = 0.06) or SDM (p = 0.10). SDM was the most reported preferred DLOC. Conclusion mPC patients reporting SDM had better physical functioning and a trend toward greater decision satisfaction at 4 months than physician- or patient-directed decision-making, suggesting measurable benefit from patient involvement in decision-making. Future investigations of these associations in larger, more diverse populations can further clarify these previously unmeasured benefits of patient engagement in treatment decisions.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference22 articles.

1. American Cancer Society. Cancer Facts and Figures. (2022)

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4. Decision making during serious illness: what role do patients really want to play?;Degner LF;J Clin Epidemiol,1992

5. Weeks JC.Treatment decision making in early-stage breast cancer: should surgeons match patients' desired level of involvement?;Keating NL;J Clin Oncol,2002

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