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| ID | Type | Description | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1K01HS023680-01A1 | U.S. AHRQ Grant/Contract | View source |
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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| National Institutes of Health (NIH) | NIH |
| Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) | FED |
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The overall goal of this study is to qualitatively assess the surgical decision-making process from both the patient and physician perspective
Breast cancer in young women: Breast cancer is the most common cancer diagnosed in women younger than age 40 in the United States, with approximately 14,000 new cases each year. Young women face unique psychosocial challenges, most notably fertility, sexuality, and image concerns and are at a life stage where education, career, and family are important priorities. Concern about these issues may contribute to the greater psychosocial distress seen in younger women at both diagnosis and in follow-up compared with older women. Importantly, these concerns may also influence treatment decisions including receipt of chemotherapy, adherence to endocrine therapy, and surgical decisions. Thus, attending to the unique issues of young women may enhance not only quality of care and quality of life (QOL) but also potentially disease outcomes.
Surgical management of breast cancer: Standard loco-regional management of breast cancer entails partial mastectomy (i.e., breast conserving surgery) followed by radiation or mastectomy with or without radiation. The decision depends on a number of factors including extent of disease, family history, BRCA mutation status, and personal preference. In recent years, an increasing number of women have elected to undergo contralateral prophylactic mastectomy (CPM) in conjunction with surgery of the affected breast (usually choosing bilateral mastectomy), despite a lack of clear evidence for survival benefit from this procedure in the vast majority of women. In weighing the benefits and risks of CPM, one must consider the absolute risk reduction of a new primary breast cancer (usually relatively modest in the average risk survivor), the long and short-term risks of this additional surgery including potential complications (bilateral mastectomy is associated with a greater risk of surgical complications) and the impact on QOL. At the same time, one must consider the competing risk of systemic recurrence of a woman's initial breast cancer. Young women, in particular, have the greatest risk of systemic recurrence and death from their original cancer, lowering the likelihood of benefit of CPM in preventing a new primary breast cancer. However, while CPM rates have increased among all breast cancer patients, increased rates of CPM are particularly pronounced among the youngest women with breast cancer, with several studies identifying young age at diagnosis as one of the strongest determinants of CPM.Physicians and researchers have been observing and discussing this trend for a number of years and yet little has been done to intervene.
The goal of the proposed research is to better understand and improve the surgical decision process in young women with breast cancer. Using qualitative research methods, we will comprehensively assess patient experiences - both patients who have had CPM and patients who did not - as well as physician perspectives regarding this decision. Based on these findings, the investigators will determine how to best improve the quality of the process, e.g., by correcting misperceptions, setting realistic expectations regarding the impact of surgery (including reconstruction) on QOL, improving communication with health care providers, and better management of anxiety surrounding diagnosis. This qualitative research is designed to build on prior quantitative analyses, by gaining an in depth perspective through focus groups and interviews, about certain issues identified as impacting the surgical decision process, including anxiety, fear of recurrence, and patient-physician communication.
Collectively, results from the qualitative assessment will inform a future phase of this research involving the design and subsequent development of a decision aid to help women make informed decisions about their breast cancer surgery.
The goal of this second phase of the research is to survey women about surgical decision-making prior to and after their consult in conjunction with pilot testing of a web-based decision aid to support high quality surgical decision-making in newly diagnosed young women with breast cancer.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Key Informant interviews | 20 in-person or phone qualitative interviews with patients. |
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| Focus Groups | four qualitative focus groups of 6-10 women each. |
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| Physician Interviews | physician qualitative interviews over the telephone. |
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| Usual care cohort (pilot) | 50 women who will be surveyed before and after their surgical consult |
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| Decision aid cohort (pilot) | 50 women who will be surveyed before and after their surgical consult and will also be sent a web-based decision aid |
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| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| qualitative data collection | Other | qualitative data collection |
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| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Thematic summary from the data gathered from the use of a moderator guide (series of probing questions) that inquires about the experiences surrounding the surgical decision-making process from both the patient and physician perspective | The goal of the proposed research is to better understand and improve the surgical decision process in young women with breast cancer. Using qualitative research methods, we will comprehensively assess patient experiences - both patients who have had CPM and patients who did not - as well as physician perspectives regarding this decision. | 1 year |
| Breast cancer knowledge | Knowledge will be assessed using selected questions from the Breast Cancer Surgery Decision Quality Instrument (BCS-DQI), an instrument designed to evaluate the quality of breast cancer treatment decisions as well as additional true/false questions related to side effects of radiation. | 2 weeks |
| Decisional conflict | Decisional conflict will be measured with the SURE scale. The SURE scale is composed of four items from the Decisional Conflict Scale that measure patients' uncertainty about which treatment choice and factors contributing to uncertainty. | 2 weeks |
| Anxiety | Anxiety will be assessed using the PROMIS Emotional Distress - Anxiety - Short Form. | 2 weeks |
| Treatment goals and preferences | have been adapted from the BCS-DQI. We will ask women to mark on a scale (not important - very important) the importance of several reasons in relation to their decision about surgery as well as concerns (not all concerned-very concerned) about local therapy. | 2 weeks |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Usability of decision aid (DA) | Assessment of what patients did and did not like about the DA, ways they think the DA can be improved, and how they felt the DA affected communication with their physician. | 2 weeks-1 month |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Patients for key informant interviews-
Patients for focus groups:
Providers:
Must care for women who have breast cancer. Can be surgeons, surgical oncologists, medical and/or radiation oncologists
Patients for Surgical Decision Making Pilot
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Young Women with a history of breast cancer and providers who care for them.
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Shoshana Rosenberg, ScD | Dana-Farber Cancer Institute | Principal Investigator |
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| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 29476578 | Background | Rosenberg SM, Greaney ML, Patenaude AF, Sepucha KR, Meyer ME, Partridge AH. "I don't want to take chances.": A qualitative exploration of surgical decision making in young breast cancer survivors. Psychooncology. 2018 Jun;27(6):1524-1529. doi: 10.1002/pon.4683. Epub 2018 Apr 6. | |
| 30942651 | Background | Rosenberg SM, Greaney ML, Patenaude AF, Partridge AH. Factors Affecting Surgical Decisions in Newly Diagnosed Young Women with Early-Stage Breast Cancer. J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol. 2019 Aug;8(4):463-468. doi: 10.1089/jayao.2019.0002. Epub 2019 Apr 3. |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D001943 | Breast Neoplasms |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D009371 | Neoplasms by Site |
| D009369 | Neoplasms |
| D001941 | Breast Diseases |
| D012871 | Skin Diseases |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D011795 | Surveys and Questionnaires |
| D003661 | Decision Support Techniques |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D003625 | Data Collection |
| D004812 | Epidemiologic Methods |
| D008919 | Investigative Techniques |
| D017531 | Health Care Evaluation Mechanisms |
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| survey | Other | survey pre and post-surgical consult |
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| decision aid | Other | web-based decision aid post-surgical consult |
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| Perception of decision process |
Perception of the decision process will be assessed with an adapted version of the Control Preferences Scale. |
| 2 weeks |
| D017437 |
| Skin and Connective Tissue Diseases |
| D011787 | Quality of Health Care |
| D017530 | Health Care Quality, Access, and Evaluation |
| D011634 | Public Health |
| D004778 | Environment and Public Health |