What do patients want to know about surgery for low-risk thyroid cancer? A qualitative study Journal Article


Authors: Underwood, H. J.; Mott, N. M.; Saucke, M. C.; Roman, B. R.; Voils, C. I.; Pitt, S. C.
Article Title: What do patients want to know about surgery for low-risk thyroid cancer? A qualitative study
Abstract: Background: Shared decision-making about treatment for low-risk thyroid cancer requires patients and surgeons to work together to select treatment that best balances risks and expected outcomes with patient preferences and values. To participate, patients must be activated and ask questions. We aimed to characterize what topics patients prioritize during treatment decision-making. Methods: We identified substantive questions by patients with low-risk (cT1-2, N0) thyroid cancer during audio-recorded consultations with 9 surgeons at 2 unique health care systems. Logistics questions were excluded. Qualitative content analysis was used to identify major themes among patients' questions and surgeon responses. Results: Overall, 28 of 30 patients asked 253 substantive questions, with 2 patients not asking any substantive questions (median 8, range 0-25). Patients were 20 to 71 years old, mostly White (86.7%) and female (80.0%). The questions addressed extent of surgery, hormone supplementation, risk of cancer progression, radioactive iodine, and etiology of thyroid cancer. When patients probed for a recommendation regarding extent of surgery, surgeons often responded indirectly. When patients asked how surgery could impact quality of life, surgeons focused on oncologic benefits and surgical risk. Patients commonly asked about hormone supplementation and radioactive iodine. Conclusion: Patient questions focused on the decision regarding extent of surgery, quality of life, and nonsurgical aspects of thyroid cancer care. Surgeon responses do not consistently directly answer patients' questions but focus on the risks, benefits, and conduct of surgery itself. These findings suggest an opportunity to help surgeons with resources to improve shared decision-making by providing information that patients prioritize. (c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Keywords: physicians; impact; decision-making; of-life; support needs; unmet information; question-asking
Journal Title: Surgery
Volume: 173
Issue: 1
ISSN: 0039-6060
Publisher: Elsevier Inc.  
Date Published: 2023-01-01
Start Page: 226
End Page: 231
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000905179700001
DOI: 10.1016/j.surg.2022.05.049
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 36336505
PMCID: PMC10353734
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Benjamin Raphael Roman
    75 Roman