Hope and prognostic disclosure

Author:

Mack J. W.1,Cook E. F.1,Wolfe J.1,Grier H. E.1,Cleary P. D.1,Weeks J. C.1

Affiliation:

1. Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, MA; Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA; Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT

Abstract

6510 Background: Physicians sometimes selectively convey prognostic information to support patients’ hopes. However, the relationship between prognostic disclosure and hope is not known. Methods: We surveyed 194 parents of children with cancer (overall response rate 70%) in their first year of cancer treatment at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Children’s Hospital, Boston, Mass, and the children’s physicians. We evaluated relationships between parents’ recall of prognostic disclosure by the physician and the extent to which physician communications “always” made them feel hopeful. A five-item index of prognostic disclosure assessed whether prognostic information was provided in any form, in quantitative terms, and in written form, whether the physician gave prognostic information before the parent asked, and whether parents wanted additional prognostic information beyond what they had already received. Results: Parents were less likely to report hopeful communication when the child’s likelihood of cure was low (OR .70 per category of decreasing likelihood of cure, P=.0003). However, parents who reported having received more extensive prognostic information were more likely to report hopeful communication, even when the prognosis was poor. In a multivariable model, parental report that physician communication “always” made them feel hopeful was associated with increased prognostic disclosure (OR 1.67 per element of disclosure, P=.009) and higher perceived communication quality (OR 5.39, P<.0001). In contrast, communication-related hope was inversely associated with the child’s likelihood of cure (OR .67, P=.006). Conclusions: Although physicians sometimes selectively convey prognostic information to preserve hope, we found no evidence that prognostic disclosure makes parents less hopeful. Instead, disclosure of prognosis by the physician can support hope for parents of children with cancer, even when the child’s prognosis is poor. No significant financial relationships to disclose. [Table: see text]

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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