First impressions: A prospective evaluation of patient–physician concordance and satisfaction following the initial medical oncology consultation

Author:

Bach Yvonne1ORCID,Panov Elan1,Espin‐Garcia Osvaldo1,Chen Eric1,Krzyzanowska Monika1,O'Kane Grainne1,Moore Malcolm1,Prince Rebecca M.1,Knox Jennifer1,Grant Robert1,Ma Lucy X.1ORCID,Allen Michael J.1,Eng Lawson1,Kosyachkova Ekaterina1,Megid Thais Baccili Cury1,Barron Carly1,Wang Xin1,Saltiel Marie‐Philippe1,Farooq Abdul Rehman Rehman1ORCID,Jang Raymond W.1,Elimova Elena1

Affiliation:

1. Princess Margaret Cancer Centre Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAn especially significant event in the patient–oncologist relationship is the initial consultation, where many complex topics—diagnosis, treatment intent, and often, prognosis—are discussed in a relatively short period of time. This study aimed to measure patients' understanding of the information discussed during their first medical oncology visit and their satisfaction with the communication from medical oncologists.MethodsBetween January and August 2021, patients without prior systemic treatment of their gastrointestinal malignancy (GI) attending the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre (PMCC) were approached within 24 h of their initial consultation to complete a paper‐based questionnaire assessing understanding of their disease (diagnosis, treatment plan/intent, and prognosis) and satisfaction with the consultation. Medical oncology physicians simultaneously completed a similar questionnaire about the information discussed at the initial visit. Matched patient–physician responses were compared to assess the degree of concordance.ResultsA total of 184 matched patient–physician surveys were completed. The concordance rates for understanding of diagnosis, treatment plan, treatment intent, and prognosis were 92.9%, 59.2%, 66.8%, and 59.8%, respectively. After adjusting for patient and physician variables, patients who reported treatment intent to be unclear at the time of the consultation were independently associated with lower satisfaction scores (global p = 0.014). There was no statistically significant association between patient satisfaction and whether prognosis was disclosed (p = 0.08).ConclusionAn in‐depth conversation as to what treatment intent and prognosis means is reasonable during the initial medical oncology consultation to ensure patients and caregivers have a better understanding about their cancer.

Funder

Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

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