Abstract 1869P
Background
Despite the plethora of patient (pt) communication studies in the past decade, many of them include a diverse and heterogeneous pt and physician cohort. Thus, this single-centre prospective study aimed to measure gastrointestinal (GI) cancer pts' understanding of the information discussed during their first medical oncology visit and their satisfaction with the communication from subspecialized GI medical oncologists.
Methods
Between January and August 2021, chemotherapy-naïve pts in the gastrointestinal clinic at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre (PMCC), Toronto, Canada, were consecutively approached within 24 hours of their initial consultation to complete a paper-based questionnaire about their understanding of their cancer (diagnosis, treatment plan/intent, prognosis) and satisfaction with the communication. GI medical oncologists concurrently completed a similar questionnaire. Pt and physician responses were compared to assess the degree of concordance. Uni/multivariable analyses were performed to identify pt/physician-based factors associated with concordance levels and pt satisfaction.
Results
A total of 184 matched pt-physician surveys were completed. The concordance rates for understanding of diagnosis, treatment plan, treatment intent, and prognosis were 92.9%, 59.2%, 66.8%, and 59.8%, respectively. Pts who reported treatment intent to be unclear at the time of the consultation were independently associated with lower satisfaction scores compared to those who reported their treatment intent to be curative (p=0.014). There was no statistical significance between patient satisfaction and whether prognosis was disclosed (p=0.08). Table: 1869P
N=184 | Fully concordant, n (%) | Partially concordant, n (%) | Fully discordant, n (%) | Missing, n (%) |
Diagnosis | 171 (92.9) | N/A | 10 (5.4) | 3 (1.6) |
Treatment Plan | 109 (59.2) | 75 (40.8) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
Treatment Intent | 123 (66.8) | N/A | 55 (29.9) | 6 (3.3) |
Prognosis | 110 (59.8) | N/A | 65 (35.3) | 9 (4.9) |
Conclusions
Pt understanding of treatment intent and prognosis after the first medical oncology consultation remain low. Further studies on the effectiveness of consultation aids in this setting are needed.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1855P - Assessment of depression and anxiety among adult patients with solid tumours admitted in national institute of cancer research & hospital
Presenter: Salman Al Ayub
Session: Poster session 05
1857P - Psychological distress in Georgian cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy: Before and after the COVID-19 pandemic
Presenter: Mariam Abuladze
Session: Poster session 05
1858P - Discrepancies between psychological stress and emotional care in cancer patients revealed in a social listening analysis
Presenter: Dalyong Kim
Session: Poster session 05
1859P - Digital goal management training as treatment for cognitive impairment in cervical cancer survivors: A feasibility study
Presenter: Elisabeth Areklett
Session: Poster session 05
1860P - Objective and subjective neurocognitive functioning (NCF) in advanced cancer survivors treated with immune checkpoint blockade (ICB)
Presenter: Nathalie Vanlaer
Session: Poster session 05
1861P - A randomized controlled trial on the efficacy and safety of the Untire app for moderate-to-severe cancer-related fatigue in German patients
Presenter: Simon Spahrkäs
Session: Poster session 05
1862P - Measuring the prevalence of fatigue in children with cancer: Evidence from Egypt
Presenter: Nourhan Abdalkader
Session: Poster session 05
1863P - Compassion fatigue among the staff involved in medical carcinology services
Presenter: Nouha Abidi
Session: Poster session 05
1864P - To what extent do nulliparous, female adolescents and young adults diagnosed with cancer have children after cancer treatment?
Presenter: Line Bentsen
Session: Poster session 05
1865P - Women with elderly early-stage breast cancer with type A personality may have decreased self-esteem after chemotherapy: A pilot study (POSEIDON Study)
Presenter: Ozgur Tanriverdi
Session: Poster session 05