Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Preference studies reveal how individuals trade-off the potential benefits, harms and inconveniences of a treatment by determining the minimum benefits they judge sufficient to make the treatment worthwhile.
They are especially relevant to adjuvant therapies where individuals must weigh up modest survival benefits only realized in time by no recurrence of their cancer with side effects predominantly experienced whilst on the treatment.
Previously it was reported, for example, that over 50% of women who had adjuvant chemotherapy for early breast cancer judged a 1% improvement in 5 year survival rates sufficient to make it worthwhile.
Larger survival benefits were required for longer duration adjuvant hormonal therapy where over 50% of women required at least 5% improvement in 5 year survival rates to make it worthwhile.
The endocrine therapy is generally proposed to all patients with endocrine positive early breast cancer to reduce the risk of recurrence and death. Moreover several data support that the prolongation of hormonal therapy (i.e. 10 years of hormonal treatment) is associated with statistical improved outcome.
In order to achieve the benefit related to hormonal therapy all women have to be treated despite the fact that the data and analyses are unable to differentiate as to whether a small prolongation in survival accrues to all women treated or a few patients survive who would otherwise have died. Moreover the hormonal therapy is associated with side effects that may impact the quality of life of the patients.
Patients are more likely to accept treatment on the basis of presented relative rather than absolute risks and so the question arises as to whether unrealistic improvements in outcome are expected by patients.
The interviews with patients in the proposed trial will elicit the expected gains both in terms of survival and life years and will be able to assess the proportion of patients who considered an improvement of realistic size was sufficient to justify the treatment and the prolongation of the treatment.
Several studies showed that choices are guided by the personal attitude to react and adapt to traumatic events, individual resilience.
It is important therefore to consider also the influence of these factors on the patients' treatment preferences.
For this reason, besides the elicitation of preferences, resilience and reaction to traumatic events will be assessed thorough validated questionnaires.
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Group 1 - before starting ET | women candidate to receive ET and interviewed before starting treatment |
| |
| Group 2 - within 1 year of ET | women interviewed within 1 years from beginning of ET |
| |
| Group 3 - between 4 and 6 years of ET | women interviewed after more than 4 years but no more than 6 years of ET |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Completion of questionnaires | Other | Completion of questionnaires at the time of study entry |
|
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Percentage of risk reduction needed to consider endocrine therapy worthwhile | Risk reduction will be evaluated in the 40% and 20% 5 years risk scenarios | 1 week |
| Number of years gain needed to consider ET worthwhile | Prolonged survival time gain will be evaluated in the 5-yr and 15-yr survival scenarios | 1 week |
Not provided
Not provided
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Patients with hormonal receptors positive breast cancer candidate to adjuvant hormonal therapy or who are receiving hormonal therapy (within 1 year from beginning for group 2 and who are received at least 4 or 5 or 6 years of hormonal therapy)
Not provided
| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Emilia Montagna, MD | European Institute of Oncology | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| European Institute of Oncology | Milan | Italy |
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D001943 | Breast Neoplasms |
| D001941 | Breast Diseases |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D009371 | Neoplasms by Site |
| D009369 | Neoplasms |
| D012871 | Skin Diseases |
| D017437 | Skin and Connective Tissue Diseases |
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided
Not provided