Abstract
Importance: Several international guidelines have endorsed more conservative treatment of low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer (LRDTC), yet patients are facing more treatment options with similar oncologic outcomes and are expressing feelings of confusion, dissatisfaction, and anxiety. Shared decision-making, which considers the patient's values and preferences along with the most reliable medical evidence, has been proposed to optimize patient satisfaction in the context of the current clinical equipoise. Objectives: To understand key individual and behavioral factors affecting the patient and clinician decision-making process in treatment decision for LRDTC. Evidence Review: This systematic review and meta-ethnography involved a comprehensive literature search of MEDLINE, Embase, PubMed, and CINAHL databases for qualitative and mixed-method studies on patient and clinician experiences with the decision-making process for LRDTC treatment. The quality of the studies was assessed using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool; meta-ethnography was used for data analysis. Primary and secondary themes of the included studies were extracted, compared, and translated across articles to produce a lines-of-argument synthesis. Findings: Of 1081 publications identified, 12 articles met the inclusion criteria. The qualitative synthesis produced 4 themes: (1) a bimodal distribution of patient preferences for treatment decisions; (2) clinician anxiety affected equipoise and biased their recommendations; (3) clinicians struggled to identify patient concerns and preferences; and (4) the clinician-patient relationship and psychosocial support were key to shared decision-making but were frequently overlooked. Conclusions and Relevance: The findings of this systematic review and meta-ethnography emphasize the need for better patient-clinician communication, particularly with respect to eliciting patient concerns and preferences. With an ever-increasing pool of thyroid cancer survivors, future efforts should be directed at establishing and evaluating tools that will aid in shared decision-making for treatment of patients with LRDTC. Trial Registration: PROSPERO Identifier: CRD42022286395.
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CITATION STYLE
Yang, W., Lee, Y. K., Lorgelly, P., Rogers, S. N., & Kim, D. (2023, May 11). Challenges of Shared Decision-making by Clinicians and Patients with Low-risk Differentiated Thyroid Cancer: A Systematic Review and Meta-Ethnography. JAMA Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery. American Medical Association. https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaoto.2023.0101
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