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Treatment preference and patient centered prostate cancer care: Design and rationale

Authors :
S. Bruce Malkowicz
Joseph J. Gallo
Ravishankar Jayadevappa
Sumedha Chhatre
Keith Van Arsdalen
Knashawn H. Morales
David I. Lee
Marsha N. Wittink
Adele Marie Caruso
J. Sanford Schwartz
Alan J. Wein
Thomas J. Guzzo
Source :
Contemporary clinical trials. 45
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Prostate cancer is a slow progressing cancer that affects millions of men in the US. Due to uncertainties in outcomes and treatment complications, it is important that patients engage in informed decision making to choose the "optimal treatment". Patient centered care that encompasses informed decision-making can improve treatment choice and quality of care. Thus, assessing patient treatment preferences is critical for developing an effective decision support system. The objective of this patient-centered randomized clinical trial was to study the comparative effectiveness of a conjoint analysis intervention compared to usual care in improving subjective and objective outcomes in prostate cancer patients. We identified preferred attributes of alternative prostate cancer treatments that will aid in evaluating attributes of treatment options. In this two-phase study, in Phase 1 we used mixed methods to develop an adaptive conjoint task instrument. The conjoint task required the patients to trade-off attributes associated with treatments by assessing their relative importance. Phase 2 consisted of a randomized controlled trial of men with localized prostate cancer. We analyzed the effect of conjoint task intervention on the association between preferences, treatment and objective and subjective outcomes. Our conjoint task instrument can lead to a values-based patient-centered decision aid tool and help tailor treatment decision making to the values of prostate cancer patients. This will ultimately improve clinical decision making, clinical policy process, enhance patient centered care and improve prostate cancer outcomes.

Details

ISSN :
15592030
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Contemporary clinical trials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....07a16567a3d98bc9d2b12b0eb642f9f8