Hopes, concerns, satisfaction and regret in a precision medicine trial for childhood cancer: a mixed-methods study of parent and patient perspectives
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Published:2023-09-19
Issue:10
Volume:129
Page:1634-1644
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ISSN:0007-0920
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Container-title:British Journal of Cancer
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Br J Cancer
Author:
Wakefield Claire E.ORCID, Hetherington KateORCID, Robertson Eden G.ORCID, Donoghoe Mark W.ORCID, Hunter Jacqueline D.ORCID, Vetsch JanineORCID, Marron Jonathan M.ORCID, Tucker Katherine M.ORCID, Marshall Glenn M.ORCID, Broom Alexander, Haber Michelle, Tyrrell VanessaORCID, Malkin David, Lau LorettaORCID, Mateos Marion K.ORCID, O’Brien Tracey A., Ziegler David S.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Paediatric precision oncology aims to match therapeutic agents to driver gene targets. We investigated whether parents and patients regret participation in precision medicine trials, particularly when their hopes are unfulfilled.
Methods
Parents and adolescent patients completed questionnaires at trial enrolment (T0) and after receiving results (T1). Parents opted-in to an interview at T1. Bereaved parents completed a questionnaire 6-months post-bereavement (T1B). We analysed quantitative data with R and qualitative data thematically with NVivo, before integrating all data for interpretation.
Results
182 parents and 23 patients completed T0; 108/182 parents and 8/23 patients completed T1; 27/98 bereaved parents completed T1B; and 45/108 parents were interviewed. At enrolment, participants held concurrent hopes that precision medicine would benefit future children and their child. Participants expressed concern regarding wait-times for receipt of results. Most participants found the trial beneficial and not burdensome, including bereaved parents. Participants reported high trial satisfaction (median scores: parents: 93/100; patients: 80/100). Participants expressed few regrets (parent median scores: parents: 10/100; bereaved parents: 15/100; patient regret: 2/8 expressed minimal regret).
Conclusions
Even when trial outcomes did not match their hopes, parents and patients rarely regretted participating in a childhood cancer precision medicine trial. These data are critical for integrating participants’ views into future precision medicine delivery.
Funder
Department of Health | National Health and Medical Research Council Cancer Institute NSW Foundation for the National Institutes of Health
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Oncology
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