Shared Decision-Making in Patients With Prostate Cancer in Japan: Patient Preferences Versus Physician Perceptions

Author:

Schaede Ulrike1,Mahlich Jörg1,Nakayama Masahiko1,Kobayashi Hisanori1,Takahashi Yuriko1,Saito Katsuhiko1,Uemura Hiroji1,Tokumitsu Masayuki1,Yoshizawa Kazutake1

Affiliation:

1. Ulrike Schaede, University of California at San Diego, San Diego, CA; Jörg Mahlich, Janssen Pharmaceutical K.K., Tokyo, Japan, and University of Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany; Masahiko Nakayama, Hisanori Kobayashi, and Kazutake Yoshizawa, Janssen Pharmaceutical K.K.; Yuriko Takahashi and Katsuhiko Saito, Anterio, Tokyo; Hiroji Uemura, Yokohama City University, Medical Center, Yokohama; and Masayuki Tokumitsu, Kitasaito Hospital, Ashikawa, Japan.

Abstract

This article adds the Japanese perspective to our knowledge of shared decision-making (SDM) preferences by surveying patients with prostate cancer (PCA) and physicians in Japan. In 2015, 103 Japanese patients with PCA were asked about their SDM preferences by using an Internet-based 5-point-scale questionnaire. Concurrently, 127 Japanese physicians were surveyed regarding their perceptions of patient preferences on SDM. Drivers of preferences and perceptions were analyzed using univariable ordinal logistic regression and graphing the fitted response probabilities. Although 41% of both patients and physicians expressed and expected a desire for active involvement in treatment decisions (a higher rate than in a similar study for the United States in 2001), almost half the Japanese patients preferred SDM, but only 33% of physicians assumed this was their choice. That is, 29% of Japanese physicians underestimated patients’ preference for involvement in making treatment decisions. Patients with lower health-related quality of life (as measured by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Prostate [FACT-P]) expressed a stronger preference for SDM. The study shows that the worse the medical situation, the more patients with PCA prefer to be involved in the treatment decision, yet physicians tend to underestimate the preferences of their patients. Perhaps in contrast to common assumptions, Japanese patients are as interested in being involved in decision making as are patients in the United States.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Oncology,Cancer Research

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