Patients’ attitudes and preferences toward delayed disease progression in the absence of improved survival

Author:

Brundage Michael D1ORCID,Booth Christopher M1,Eisenhauer Elizabeth A2,Galica Jacqueline1,Kankesan Janarthanan3,Karim Safiya4,Koven Rachel5,McDonald Valerie5,Ng Terry6,O’Donnell Jennifer1,ten Hove Julia1,Robinson Andrew7

Affiliation:

1. Cancer Care and Epidemiology, Queen’s University, Cancer Research Institute , Kingston, ON, Canada

2. Cancer Research Institute, Queen’s University , Kingston, ON, Canada

3. Quinte Health Care, Cancer Clinic , Belleville, ON, Canada

4. Tom Baker Cancer Centre , Calgary, AB, Canada

5. Queen’s University, Cancer Research Institute Patient Advocate on behalf of Cancer Care and Epidemiology, , Kingston, ON, Canada

6. Division of Medical Oncology, University of Ottawa , Ottawa, ON, Canada

7. Cancer Centre of Southeastern Ontario, Kingston General Hospital , Kingston, ON, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Background Cancer patients’ attitudes toward progression-free survival (PFS) gains offered by treatment are not well understood, particularly in the absence of overall survival (OS) gains. The objectives were to describe patients’ willingness to accept treatment that offers PFS gains without OS gains, to compare these findings with treatments offering OS gains, and to qualitatively summarize patients’ reasons for their preferences. Methods A multicenter, cross-sectional, convergent mixed-methods study design recruited patients who had received at least 3 months of systemic therapy for incurable solid tumors. A treatment trade-off exercise determined the gains in imaging PFS that patients require to prefer additional systemic treatment for a scenario of a newly diagnosed, asymptomatic, incurable abdominal tumor. A qualitative, descriptive, thematic analysis explored factors influencing patients’ decisions, and a narrative method integrated the quantitative and qualitative findings. Results In total, 100 patients participated (63% were older than 60 years of age). If additional treatment with added toxicity offered no OS advantage, 17% would prefer it for no PFS benefit; 26% for some PFS benefit (range, 3-9 months), whereas 51% would decline it regardless of PFS benefit. Similarly, 71% preferred additional treatment offering a 6-month OS advantage dependent on described toxicity levels (P = .03). A spectrum of reasons for these preferences reflected the complexity of participants’ attitudes and values. Conclusions Prolongation of time to progression was not universally valued. Most patients did not prefer treatments that negatively affect quality of life for PFS gains alone. Implications for individual decision making, policy, and trials research are discussed.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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