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Patient Preferences for Treatment Outcomes in Oncology with a Focus on the Older Patient—A Systematic Review

SIMPLE SUMMARY: In oncology, treatment outcomes can be competing, which means that one treatment could benefit one outcome, like survival, and negatively influence another, like independence. The choice of treatment therefore depends on the patient’s preference for outcomes, which needs to be assess...

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Autores principales: Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke), Wiersma, Anke, Festen, Suzanne, Stegmann, Mariken E., Soubeyran, Pierre, Rostoft, Siri, O’Hanlon, Shane, Portielje, Johanneke E. A., Hamaker, Marije E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8909757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35267455
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051147
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author Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke)
Wiersma, Anke
Festen, Suzanne
Stegmann, Mariken E.
Soubeyran, Pierre
Rostoft, Siri
O’Hanlon, Shane
Portielje, Johanneke E. A.
Hamaker, Marije E.
author_facet Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke)
Wiersma, Anke
Festen, Suzanne
Stegmann, Mariken E.
Soubeyran, Pierre
Rostoft, Siri
O’Hanlon, Shane
Portielje, Johanneke E. A.
Hamaker, Marije E.
author_sort Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke)
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: In oncology, treatment outcomes can be competing, which means that one treatment could benefit one outcome, like survival, and negatively influence another, like independence. The choice of treatment therefore depends on the patient’s preference for outcomes, which needs to be assessed explicitly. Especially in older patients, patient preferences are important. Our systematic review summarizes all studies that assessed patient preferences for various treatment outcome categories. A total of 28 studies with 4374 patients were included, of which only six studies included mostly older patients. Although quality of life was only included in half of the studies, overall quality of life (79%) was most frequently prioritized as highest or second highest, followed by overall survival (67%), progression- and disease-free survival (56%), absence of severe or persistent treatment side effects (54%), treatment response (50%), and absence of transient short-term side effects (16%). In shared decision-making, these results can be used by healthcare professionals to better tailor the information provision and treatment recommendations to the individual patient. ABSTRACT: For physicians, it is important to know which treatment outcomes are prioritized overall by older patients with cancer, since this will help them to tailor the amount of information and treatment recommendations. Older patients might prioritize other outcomes than younger patients. Our objective is to summarize which outcomes matter most to older patients with cancer. A systematic review was conducted, in which we searched Embase and Medline on 22 December 2020. Studies were eligible if they reported some form of prioritization of outcome categories relative to each other in patients with all types of cancer and if they included at least three outcome categories. Subsequently, for each study, the highest or second-highest outcome category was identified and presented in relation to the number of studies that included that outcome category. An adapted Newcastle–Ottawa Scale was used to assess the risk of bias. In total, 4374 patients were asked for their priorities in 28 studies that were included. Only six of these studies had a population with a median age above 70. Of all the studies, 79% identified quality of life as the highest or second-highest priority, followed by overall survival (67%), progression- and disease-free survival (56%), absence of severe or persistent treatment side effects (54%), and treatment response (50%). Absence of transient short-term side effects was prioritized in 16%. The studies were heterogeneous considering age, cancer type, and treatment settings. Overall, quality of life, overall survival, progression- and disease-free survival, and severe and persistent side effects of treatment are the outcomes that receive the highest priority on a group level when patients with cancer need to make trade-offs in oncologic treatment decisions.
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spelling pubmed-89097572022-03-11 Patient Preferences for Treatment Outcomes in Oncology with a Focus on the Older Patient—A Systematic Review Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke) Wiersma, Anke Festen, Suzanne Stegmann, Mariken E. Soubeyran, Pierre Rostoft, Siri O’Hanlon, Shane Portielje, Johanneke E. A. Hamaker, Marije E. Cancers (Basel) Systematic Review SIMPLE SUMMARY: In oncology, treatment outcomes can be competing, which means that one treatment could benefit one outcome, like survival, and negatively influence another, like independence. The choice of treatment therefore depends on the patient’s preference for outcomes, which needs to be assessed explicitly. Especially in older patients, patient preferences are important. Our systematic review summarizes all studies that assessed patient preferences for various treatment outcome categories. A total of 28 studies with 4374 patients were included, of which only six studies included mostly older patients. Although quality of life was only included in half of the studies, overall quality of life (79%) was most frequently prioritized as highest or second highest, followed by overall survival (67%), progression- and disease-free survival (56%), absence of severe or persistent treatment side effects (54%), treatment response (50%), and absence of transient short-term side effects (16%). In shared decision-making, these results can be used by healthcare professionals to better tailor the information provision and treatment recommendations to the individual patient. ABSTRACT: For physicians, it is important to know which treatment outcomes are prioritized overall by older patients with cancer, since this will help them to tailor the amount of information and treatment recommendations. Older patients might prioritize other outcomes than younger patients. Our objective is to summarize which outcomes matter most to older patients with cancer. A systematic review was conducted, in which we searched Embase and Medline on 22 December 2020. Studies were eligible if they reported some form of prioritization of outcome categories relative to each other in patients with all types of cancer and if they included at least three outcome categories. Subsequently, for each study, the highest or second-highest outcome category was identified and presented in relation to the number of studies that included that outcome category. An adapted Newcastle–Ottawa Scale was used to assess the risk of bias. In total, 4374 patients were asked for their priorities in 28 studies that were included. Only six of these studies had a population with a median age above 70. Of all the studies, 79% identified quality of life as the highest or second-highest priority, followed by overall survival (67%), progression- and disease-free survival (56%), absence of severe or persistent treatment side effects (54%), and treatment response (50%). Absence of transient short-term side effects was prioritized in 16%. The studies were heterogeneous considering age, cancer type, and treatment settings. Overall, quality of life, overall survival, progression- and disease-free survival, and severe and persistent side effects of treatment are the outcomes that receive the highest priority on a group level when patients with cancer need to make trade-offs in oncologic treatment decisions. MDPI 2022-02-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8909757/ /pubmed/35267455 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051147 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Systematic Review
Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke)
Wiersma, Anke
Festen, Suzanne
Stegmann, Mariken E.
Soubeyran, Pierre
Rostoft, Siri
O’Hanlon, Shane
Portielje, Johanneke E. A.
Hamaker, Marije E.
Patient Preferences for Treatment Outcomes in Oncology with a Focus on the Older Patient—A Systematic Review
title Patient Preferences for Treatment Outcomes in Oncology with a Focus on the Older Patient—A Systematic Review
title_full Patient Preferences for Treatment Outcomes in Oncology with a Focus on the Older Patient—A Systematic Review
title_fullStr Patient Preferences for Treatment Outcomes in Oncology with a Focus on the Older Patient—A Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed Patient Preferences for Treatment Outcomes in Oncology with a Focus on the Older Patient—A Systematic Review
title_short Patient Preferences for Treatment Outcomes in Oncology with a Focus on the Older Patient—A Systematic Review
title_sort patient preferences for treatment outcomes in oncology with a focus on the older patient—a systematic review
topic Systematic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8909757/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35267455
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051147
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