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Helpfulness of Question Prompt Sheet for Patient-Physician Communication Among Patients With Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Clinical Trial

IMPORTANCE: There are few robust evaluations of disease-specific question prompt sheets (QPS) in patient-physician communication among patients with advanced cancer. OBJECTIVE: To compare the patient perception of helpfulness, global evaluation, and preference for the QPS vs a general information sh...

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Autores principales: Arthur, Joseph, Pawate, Varsha, Lu, Zhanni, Yennurajalingam, Sriram, Azhar, Ahsan, Reddy, Akhila, Epner, Daniel, Hui, David, Tanco, Kimberson, Delgado Guay, Marvin Omar, Vidal, Marieberta, Chen, Minxing, Bruera, Eduardo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10155065/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37129892
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.11189
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author Arthur, Joseph
Pawate, Varsha
Lu, Zhanni
Yennurajalingam, Sriram
Azhar, Ahsan
Reddy, Akhila
Epner, Daniel
Hui, David
Tanco, Kimberson
Delgado Guay, Marvin Omar
Vidal, Marieberta
Chen, Minxing
Bruera, Eduardo
author_facet Arthur, Joseph
Pawate, Varsha
Lu, Zhanni
Yennurajalingam, Sriram
Azhar, Ahsan
Reddy, Akhila
Epner, Daniel
Hui, David
Tanco, Kimberson
Delgado Guay, Marvin Omar
Vidal, Marieberta
Chen, Minxing
Bruera, Eduardo
author_sort Arthur, Joseph
collection PubMed
description IMPORTANCE: There are few robust evaluations of disease-specific question prompt sheets (QPS) in patient-physician communication among patients with advanced cancer. OBJECTIVE: To compare the patient perception of helpfulness, global evaluation, and preference for the QPS vs a general information sheet (GIS), and to examine the effect of the QPS on participants’ anxiety, participants’ speaking time, number of questions asked, and length of the clinical encounter. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This controlled, double-blind randomized clinical trial was conducted at an outpatient palliative and supportive care clinic in a cancer center in the US. Eligible patients were 18 years or older, had a cancer diagnosis, and were undergoing their first outpatient consultation visit with a palliative care physician from September 1, 2017, to May 31, 2019. Data analysis used a modified intention-to-treat design. Data were analyzed from May 18 to June 27, 2022. INTERVENTION: QPS, a 25-item list of questions developed by expert palliative care clinicians using a Delphi process and tested among ambulatory advanced cancer patients. The control was GIS, generic information material given routinely to patients seen at the supportive care clinic. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The main outcome was patient perception of helpfulness. Secondary outcomes included global evaluation and preference of QPS compared with GIS immediately after the encounter. RESULTS: A total of 130 patients (mean [SD] age, 58.6 [13.3] years; 79 [60.8%] female) were randomized to receive either QPS (67 patients [51.5%]) or GIS (63 patients [48.5%]). Patients considered QPS and GIS equally helpful, with no statistically significant difference (mean [SD] helpfulness score, 7.2 [2.3] points vs 7.1 [2.7] points; P = .79). The QPS group, compared with the GIS group, had a higher global positive view of the material (mean [SD] global perception score, 7.1 [1.3] vs 6.5 [1.7]; P = .03) and felt it prompted them more to generate new questions (mean [SD] rating, 7.0 [2.9] vs 5.3 [3.5]; P = .005). Of 47 patients asked their preference between the items, more participants preferred the QPS to the GIS in communicating with their physicians (24 patients [51.1%] vs 7 patients [14.9%]; P = .01) at the 4-week follow-up. No significant differences between the QPS and GIS groups were observed regarding participant anxiety, speaking time, number of questions asked, or consultation length (eg, mean [SD] anxiety rating, 2.3 [3.7] vs 1.6 [2.7]; P = .19). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this randomized clinical trial, participants perceived both QPS and GIS as equally helpful, but they had a more positive global view of and preferred the QPS. QPS facilitated generation of new questions without increasing patient anxiety nor prolonging the consultation. The findings provide support for increased adoption and integration of QPS into routine oncologic care. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03287492
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spelling pubmed-101550652023-05-04 Helpfulness of Question Prompt Sheet for Patient-Physician Communication Among Patients With Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Clinical Trial Arthur, Joseph Pawate, Varsha Lu, Zhanni Yennurajalingam, Sriram Azhar, Ahsan Reddy, Akhila Epner, Daniel Hui, David Tanco, Kimberson Delgado Guay, Marvin Omar Vidal, Marieberta Chen, Minxing Bruera, Eduardo JAMA Netw Open Original Investigation IMPORTANCE: There are few robust evaluations of disease-specific question prompt sheets (QPS) in patient-physician communication among patients with advanced cancer. OBJECTIVE: To compare the patient perception of helpfulness, global evaluation, and preference for the QPS vs a general information sheet (GIS), and to examine the effect of the QPS on participants’ anxiety, participants’ speaking time, number of questions asked, and length of the clinical encounter. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This controlled, double-blind randomized clinical trial was conducted at an outpatient palliative and supportive care clinic in a cancer center in the US. Eligible patients were 18 years or older, had a cancer diagnosis, and were undergoing their first outpatient consultation visit with a palliative care physician from September 1, 2017, to May 31, 2019. Data analysis used a modified intention-to-treat design. Data were analyzed from May 18 to June 27, 2022. INTERVENTION: QPS, a 25-item list of questions developed by expert palliative care clinicians using a Delphi process and tested among ambulatory advanced cancer patients. The control was GIS, generic information material given routinely to patients seen at the supportive care clinic. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The main outcome was patient perception of helpfulness. Secondary outcomes included global evaluation and preference of QPS compared with GIS immediately after the encounter. RESULTS: A total of 130 patients (mean [SD] age, 58.6 [13.3] years; 79 [60.8%] female) were randomized to receive either QPS (67 patients [51.5%]) or GIS (63 patients [48.5%]). Patients considered QPS and GIS equally helpful, with no statistically significant difference (mean [SD] helpfulness score, 7.2 [2.3] points vs 7.1 [2.7] points; P = .79). The QPS group, compared with the GIS group, had a higher global positive view of the material (mean [SD] global perception score, 7.1 [1.3] vs 6.5 [1.7]; P = .03) and felt it prompted them more to generate new questions (mean [SD] rating, 7.0 [2.9] vs 5.3 [3.5]; P = .005). Of 47 patients asked their preference between the items, more participants preferred the QPS to the GIS in communicating with their physicians (24 patients [51.1%] vs 7 patients [14.9%]; P = .01) at the 4-week follow-up. No significant differences between the QPS and GIS groups were observed regarding participant anxiety, speaking time, number of questions asked, or consultation length (eg, mean [SD] anxiety rating, 2.3 [3.7] vs 1.6 [2.7]; P = .19). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this randomized clinical trial, participants perceived both QPS and GIS as equally helpful, but they had a more positive global view of and preferred the QPS. QPS facilitated generation of new questions without increasing patient anxiety nor prolonging the consultation. The findings provide support for increased adoption and integration of QPS into routine oncologic care. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03287492 American Medical Association 2023-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC10155065/ /pubmed/37129892 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.11189 Text en Copyright 2023 Arthur J et al. JAMA Network Open. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.
spellingShingle Original Investigation
Arthur, Joseph
Pawate, Varsha
Lu, Zhanni
Yennurajalingam, Sriram
Azhar, Ahsan
Reddy, Akhila
Epner, Daniel
Hui, David
Tanco, Kimberson
Delgado Guay, Marvin Omar
Vidal, Marieberta
Chen, Minxing
Bruera, Eduardo
Helpfulness of Question Prompt Sheet for Patient-Physician Communication Among Patients With Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title Helpfulness of Question Prompt Sheet for Patient-Physician Communication Among Patients With Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_full Helpfulness of Question Prompt Sheet for Patient-Physician Communication Among Patients With Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_fullStr Helpfulness of Question Prompt Sheet for Patient-Physician Communication Among Patients With Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_full_unstemmed Helpfulness of Question Prompt Sheet for Patient-Physician Communication Among Patients With Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_short Helpfulness of Question Prompt Sheet for Patient-Physician Communication Among Patients With Advanced Cancer: A Randomized Clinical Trial
title_sort helpfulness of question prompt sheet for patient-physician communication among patients with advanced cancer: a randomized clinical trial
topic Original Investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10155065/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37129892
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.11189
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