Prognostic Understanding at Diagnosis and Associated Factors in Patients with Advanced Lung Cancer and Their Caregivers

Author:

Sato Takashi123,Soejima Kenzo14,Fujisawa Daisuke56,Takeuchi Mari6,Arai Daisuke17,Nakachi Ichiro7,Naoki Katsuhiko1,Kawada Ichiro1,Yasuda Hiroyuki1,Ishioka Kota1,Nukaga Shigenari1,Kobayashi Keigo1,Masaki Katsunori7,Inoue Takashi2,Hikima Kota2,Nakamura Morio8,Ohgino Keiko8,Oyamada Yoshitaka9,Funatsu Yohei9,Terashima Takeshi10,Miyao Naoki11,Sayama Koichi12,Saito Fumitake13,Sakamaki Fumio14,Betsuyaku Tomoko1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan

2. Department of Internal Medicine, Sano-kosei General Hospital, Sano, Japan

3. Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City, New York, USA

4. Clinical and Translational Research Center, Keio University Hospital, Tokyo, Japan

5. Department of Neuropsychiatry, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan

6. Palliative Care Center, Keio University Hospital, Tokyo, Japan

7. Pulmonary Division, Internal Medicine, Saiseikai Utsunomiya Hospital, Tochigi, Japan

8. Department of Medicine, Tokyo Saiseikai Central Hospital, Tokyo, Japan

9. Department of Respiratory Medicine, National Hospital Organization Tokyo Medical Center, Tokyo, Japan

10. Department of Respiratory Medicine, Tokyo Dental College, Chiba, Japan

11. Department of Respiratory Medicine, Nippon Kokan Hospital, Kanagawa, Japan

12. Kawasaki Municipal Hospital, Kanagawa, Japan

13. Department of Pulmonary Medicine, Eiju General Hospital, Tokyo, Japan

14. Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Department of Medicine, Tokai University Hachioji Hospital, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Background Prognostic understanding in advanced cancer patients and their caregivers may have an impact on the delivery of effective care. The aims of this study were to explore prognostic understanding at diagnosis in both patients with advanced lung cancer and their caregivers and to investigate correlates of their understanding. Subjects, Materials, and Methods A total of 193 patients with newly diagnosed advanced lung cancer and their 167 caregivers were enrolled at 16 hospitals in Japan. We assessed their perceptions of prognosis and goals of therapy and examined their associations with their sociodemographic characteristics, clinical status, quality of life, mood symptoms, and the status of disclosure of information by their treating physicians. Results One fifth of patients and caregivers (21.7% and 17.6%, respectively) mistakenly believed that the patients’ cancer was “completely curable.” Substantial proportions of them (16.9% and 10.3%, respectively) mistakenly believed that the primary goal of therapy was to remove all the cancer. Levels of anxiety and depression in both patients and caregivers were significantly higher among those who had accurate understanding of prognosis. In multivariate analyses, inaccurate perceptions of prognosis in patients were associated with sex, better emotional well-being, and lower lung cancer-specific symptom burden. Caregivers’ inaccurate perceptions of patients’ prognoses were associated with better performance status and better emotional well-being of patients. Conclusion Substantial proportions of advanced lung cancer patients and their caregivers misunderstood their prognosis. Interventions to improve their accurate prognostic understanding should be developed with careful attention paid to its associated factors. Implications for Practice This study demonstrated that substantial proportions of patients with newly diagnosed advanced lung cancer and their caregivers had misunderstandings about their prognosis. Accurate perceptions of prognosis, which are indispensable in the delivery of effective care, were associated with elevated levels of anxiety and depression in both patients and caregivers, warranting psychosocial care and support for them immediately after diagnosis. Inaccurate perceptions of prognosis in patients were associated with better emotional well-being and lower lung cancer-specific symptom burden. Illness understanding in caregivers was associated with patients’ physical and mental status. Those findings provide insight into how they obtain accurate illness understanding.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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