Supporting Treatment Decision Making in Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Trial of a Decision Aid for Patients With Advanced Colorectal Cancer Considering Chemotherapy

Author:

Leighl Natasha B.1,Shepherd Heather L.1,Butow Phyllis N.1,Clarke Stephen J.1,McJannett Margaret1,Beale Philip J.1,Wilcken Nicholas R.C.1,Moore Malcolm J.1,Chen Eric X.1,Goldstein David1,Horvath Lisa1,Knox Jennifer J.1,Krzyzanowska Monika1,Oza Amit M.1,Feld Ronald1,Hedley David1,Xu Wei1,Tattersall Martin H.N.1

Affiliation:

1. From Princess Margaret Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Centre for Medical Psychology and Evidence-Based Decision-Making, University of Sydney; Concord Repatriation General Hospital and Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney Cancer Centre; Westmead Hospital; and Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, Australia.

Abstract

Purpose Decision making in advanced cancer is increasingly complex. We developed a decision aid (DA) for patients with advanced colorectal cancer who are considering first-line chemotherapy and reviewing treatment options, prognostic information, and toxicities. We examined its impact on patient understanding, treatment decisions, decisional conflict, decision making, consultation satisfaction, anxiety, and quality of life by using a randomized trial design. Patients and Methods In all, 207 patients with colorectal cancer who were considering first-line chemotherapy for metastatic disease were randomly assigned to receive a standard medical oncology consultation or a consultation in which the DA (take-home booklet with audio recording, reviewed by an oncologist) was used. Participants completed questionnaires postconsultation, postdecision, and 1 month later. Results In this study, 100 patients were randomly assigned to the control arm, and 107 received the DA. Median age of the sample was 62 years, 58% were male, 89% had a performance status of 0 or 1, and 36% had received prior adjuvant chemotherapy. Patients receiving the DA demonstrated a greater increase in understanding of prognosis, options, and benefits, with higher overall understanding (P < .001). Decisional conflict, treatment decisions, and achievement of involvement preferences were similar between the groups. Anxiety was similar across groups and decreased over time. Most patients were confident in a decision during the first consultation; 74% chose chemotherapy, 7% supportive care alone, and 10% observation. Conclusion This randomized trial of a decision aid in advanced cancer showed that its use in advanced colorectal cancer improved patient understanding of prognosis, treatment options, risks, and benefits without increasing anxiety. DAs can improve informed consent and can be tested through randomized trials even in the advanced cancer setting.

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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