Breast Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
How Can Radiation Oncologists Better Serve Their Patients? A Randomized Study to Determine Whether Radiation Oncologists Can Improve Patient Satisfaction by Attempting to Meet Their Patients' Preferences
Limited data exists for the cancer patients' preferences on their patient-doctor interaction with their radiation oncologist. These physicians have the opportunity to develop intimate relationships with their patients since these patients typically require daily radiation treatments anywhere from one to seven weeks. Thus, by having a greater understanding of the individual patient preferences, the radiation oncologists will be able to better serve their patients leading to improved patient satisfaction with their physician and healthier outlook on life. This is the premise and the hypothesis of this study.
An instrument, a questionnaire, previously developed by our group (IRB# 0512075) will be used
to determine these cancer patient/subjects' preferences for the following six categories (see
Appendix 1)
1. How should the radiation oncologist address them (by their first name or Mr/Mrs)?
2. Should the radiation oncologists wear a white coat?
3. Should the radiation oncologist discuss their prognosis and survival with them?
4. Should the radiation oncologist have physical contact with their patient (hold hand or
hug the patient.)?
5. Should the radiation oncologist inquire about their religious beliefs to help cope with
their cancer?
6. Should the radiation oncologist use basic, lay language or more technical terminology
when describing the radiation treatment?
This research study will consist of a randomized study of breast, prostate, and lung cancer
patients/subjects receiving radiation therapy at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer
Institute and UPMC Cancer Centers who will complete this questionnaire. Radiation therapy can
be either for definitive or palliative therapy. This creates six distinct cohorts in the
study (definitive breast, prostate, and lung cancer, palliative breast, prostate, and lung
cancer) that provide an adequate representation of the cancer patient/subject cohorts that
receive radiation therapy.
Patients/subjects will answer this questionnaire at the time of the initial consultation with
the radiation oncologist (before meeting the radiation oncologist), once midway during
radiation therapy, and at the completion of the radiation treatment. At completion, there
will be additional questions used from a modified version of an established validated
instrument currently being used at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute to assess
patient/subject satisfaction. (Appendix 2). Participants will rate the importance of each
item on a 5-point scale: strongly disagree, disagree, neither agree nor disagree, agree, or
strongly agree. They will also use a parallel ranking from 0-100 on each item to more finely
assess the satisfaction differences for the survey in Appendix 2 only.
After subjects answer the questionnaire at time of initial consultation, the subject will
then be randomized to either an experimental or control group. In the experimental group, the
radiation oncologist participants will read their patient's responses to this questionnaire
prior to their initial consultation and try to adapt to the subject's (patient's)
preferences. In the control group, the radiation oncologist participant will be blinded to
the results of their patient's questionnaire. At the end of treatment, the radiation
oncologists who viewed their patient preferences will have to answer the following question
according to the 5 point scale system: "Did knowledge of your patient's preferences influence
your behavior?" The radiation oncologist participant will not have access to the patient
satisfaction survey.
The duration of study per patient participant will the duration of the radiation treatment
which has an average length of 4 weeks. A subject accrual of 500 patient participants and 30
radiation oncologist participants is expected at the University of Pittsburgh Cancer
Institute and UPMC Cancer Centers, consisting of 19 Radiation Oncology centers across Western
Pennsylvania. The expected duration of the entire study is 1 year. The data will be collected
through these instruments to generate a database collected in our database management system.
The data will be coded and maintained by the clinical study coordinator.
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