Using a Treatment-tradeoff Method to Elicit Preferences for the Treatment of Locally Advanced Non-Small-cell Lung Cancer
- 1 August 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Medical Decision Making
- Vol. 18 (3) , 256-267
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0272989x9801800302
Abstract
The study was designed to evaluate a treatment-tradeoff method for its potential in helping lung cancer patients make treatment decisions. A treatment-tradeoff interview was conducted to determine how patients weighed potential survival benefits against the potential toxicities of different treatment options: 1) low-dose versus high-dose radiotherapy, and 2) high-dose radiotherapy versus combination chemo-radiotherapy. Fifty-six patients who had experienced cancer and 20 clinic staff participated; twenty of these participants repeated the interview in an assessment of response consistency. The treatment-tradeoff method proved feasible: all staff and 53 of the 56 patients were able to complete the process. A wide range of threshold scores across participants was observed for both tradeoffs. Sixty percent of the patients would accept the more toxic combination therapy over high-dose radiotherapy if the former offered a 10% absolute improvement in three-year survival. The method also proved reliable: test-retest correlations were high (τ ranged from 0.7 to 0.87 and r from 0.82 to 0.94) and test-retest mean score differences were low (1.3-4.2). The most clinically useful mea sure of consistency was a "preference consistency" index, which revealed that most patients declared the same treatment preference at test and retest. The authors conclude that, while there is great interindividual variability in willingness to accept aggressive treatments for lung cancer, patients' values can be consistently elicited with the tradeoff method. The method has potential for clinical application in decision making and for health-care policy development. Key words: treatment tradeoffs; patient decision making; lung cancer; policy. (Med Decis Making 1998;18:256-267)Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer: Do we know the questions?: A survey of randomized trials from 1966–1993Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1996
- Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) 88-08 and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) 4588: Preliminary Results of a Phase III Trial in Regionally Advanced, Unresectable Non-Small-Cell Lung CancerJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1995
- Cancer statistics, 1994CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 1994
- Radiotherapy versus radiotherapy enhanced by cisplatin in stage III non-small cell lung cancerInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 1992
- Radiotherapy Alone Versus Combined Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy in Nonresectable Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: First Analysis of a Randomized Trial in 353 PatientsJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1991
- A Randomized Trial of Induction Chemotherapy plus High-Dose Radiation versus Radiation Alone in Stage III Non-Small-Cell Lung CancerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- Controversies in the management of non-small cell lung cancer: the results of an expert surrogate studyRadiotherapy and Oncology, 1990
- Long-term observations of the patterns of failure in patients with unresectable non-oat cell carcinoma of the lung treated with definitive radiotherapy report by the radiation therapy oncology groupCancer, 1987
- Non-small cell lung cancer: how oncologists want to be treatedInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 1987
- A New International Staging System for Lung CancerChest, 1986