EBCC: Surgeons Don't Offer Breast Cancer Patients Choices Of Treatment As Often As They Could

BARCELONA, SPAIN — March 20, 2002 — Research carried out at the Ulleval University Hospital in Oslo, Norway, has revealed that breast cancer surgeons do not always offer a choice between mastectomy and breast-conserving surgery to women with early stage breast cancer, even when either option is medically appropriate.

Mrs. Inger Schou Bredal told the 3rd European Breast Cancer Conference in Barcelona today (Wednesday 22 March) that, in addition, the women's perceptions of when they had been offered a choice by the surgeon differed significantly from the surgeons' perceptions of when they had offered a choice. The sex of the surgeon also made a difference, with female surgeons basing their recommendations on their assessment of the women's need for security, while male surgeons put more emphasis on how important they felt the breast was for the women's feelings of femininity.

Mrs. Schou Bredal, a doctoral student in nursing science at the hospital, asked 194 women with early stage breast cancer and 25 surgeons to complete questionnaires. The aim was to discover whether women's perceptions of receiving a choice between mastectomy (MAS) and breast-conserving surgery (BCS) matched the surgeons' perceptions of giving a choice, and to assess if factors influencing the women's choice of surgery were the same as the factors which influenced the surgeons' recommendations.

She found that even when surgeons considered that it was medically appropriate to give 81 percent of women a choice, they only offered a choice in 62 percent of cases. Amongst the patients, 59 percent of the women felt they had been offered a choice between MAS and BCS. In only 38 percent of cases was there complete agreement between the women's assessment of receiving a choice and the surgeons' of giving a choice.

Factors that most influenced the women's choices were fear of cancer recurrence (in 89 percent of cases), the necessity of further treatment (72 percent) and the surgeons' recommendations (70 percent). For surgeons, medical assessment (in 97 percent of cases) was the most important factor, followed by the breast appearance in relation to surgical outcome (82 percent). Women who were not given a specific recommendation tended to choose BCS (66 percent).

Mrs. Schou Bredal said: "From this research it is clear that factors influencing the women's choice of surgery are not the same as the factors influencing the surgeons' recommendations. Yet the most influential person for the woman in the decision-making process is the surgeon. The vast majority of women complied with their surgeon's recommendation for a particular type of surgery – 91 percent of women followed the surgeon's advice and when they didn't it was usually because they chose to have a mastectomy rather than BCS because they were afraid of cancer recurrence.

"I have not asked the surgeons what reason they had for not giving a choice and I think it would be interesting to do a survey asking surgeons why they didn't give a choice when either treatment was a medical possibility, and why they emphasise the factors they do when giving a recommendation.

"However, from my experience as a breast cancer nurse, I think there are several reasons why sometimes no choice is offered. The surgeons may assess that the woman doesn't want to make the choice, or they evaluate that the woman 's capacity for enduring further treatment is poor (because BCS is followed by radiotherapy) and therefore decide on mastectomy. My study supports this possibility because women who had BCS were given a choice more often than women who had mastectomies. The surgeons may have felt that the cosmetic outcome after surgery would be poor if the women choose BCS and therefore recommended mastectomy.

Other explanations could be that some surgeons may have felt that, regardless of the information given, the women could never completely comprehend the information because of their lack of medical knowledge, or that the time they spent with each woman was too brief to fully outline and discuss all treatment options, or the surgeon felt a genuine dilemma about sharing too much information and making patients assume more responsibility for treatment decision."

לכתבה המלאה

0 תגובות

השאירו תגובה

רוצה להצטרף לדיון?
תרגישו חופשי לתרום!

כתיבת תגובה

מידע נוסף לעיונך

כתבות בנושאים דומים

הנך גולש/ת באתר כאורח/ת.

במידה והנך מנוי את/ה מוזמן/ת לבצע כניסה מזוהה וליהנות מגישה לכל התכנים המיועדים למנויים
להמשך גלישה כאורח סגור חלון זה