“Clinical trials are space travel”: Factors of psychological response to recurrence among oncologists enrolling patients in treatment optimization trials

Author:

Henderson Nicole Lynn1ORCID,Andrews Courtney1,Ingram Stacey A.1,Zubkoff Lisa12,Tung Nadine3,Wagner Lynne I.4ORCID,Wallner Lauren P.5ORCID,Wolff Antonio6,Rocque Gabrielle B.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Alabama at Birmingham Heersink School of Medicine Birmingham Alabama USA

2. GRECC, Birmingham Virginia Healthcare System Birmingham Alabama USA

3. Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy Wake Forest University Health Sciences Winston‐Salem North Carolina USA

5. University of Michigan, Rogel Cancer Center Ann Arbor Michigan USA

6. John Hopkins University Baltimore Maryland USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCancer recurrence after treatment is a concern for patients and oncologists alike. The movement towards treatment optimization, with trials testing less than the current standard of care (SoC), complicates this experience. Our objective was to assess oncologists' psychological response to patient recurrence on optimization‐focused trials and identify factors that influence those experiences.MethodsClinical oncologists participated in a semi‐structured interview regarding patient enrollment in treatment optimization trials. We identified factors that influence the degree of psychological response that the oncologist may feel after patient recurrence. Residual agreement analysis was used to identify whether differences in reported psychological response was associated with alternative emphases on identified factors.ResultsThirty‐six oncologists identified 20 factors spanning five major themes that affected their psychological response to patient recurrence. All oncologists expressed willingness to enroll patients in treatment optimization clinical trials; however, half indicated that they were more likely to experience a negative psychological response after a treatment optimization trial than after a traditional intensification trial, and a quarter reported that patient recurrence on an optimization trial would impact their recommendations for future trial enrollment. Oncologists who reported more negative psychological responses to patient recurrence after participation in an optimization trial were more likely to emphasize introspective factors, while those who reported no difference in response emphasized patient‐ and process‐focused factors.ConclusionsAlthough most oncologists recognize the importance of treatment optimization trials, a significant proportion indicated a greater potential for psychological distress following patient recurrence in such trials and offered insight into how trial design and the process of patient enrollment can be improved to minimize those negative psychological responses.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Susan G. Komen

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

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