"How much time do I have?" : communicating prognosis in the era of exceptional responders

Article indépendant

LEBLANC, Thomas W. | TEMEL, Jennifer S. | HELFT, Paul R.

Prognostication is the science by which clinicians estimate a patient's expected outcome. A robust literature shows that many patients with advanced cancer have inaccurate perceptions of their prognosis, thus raising questions about whether patients are truly making informed decisions. Clinicians' ability to communicate prognostic information is further complicated today by the availability of novel, efficacious immunotherapies and genome-guided treatments. Currently, clinicians lack tools to predict which patients with advanced disease will achieve an exceptional response to these new therapies. This increased prognostic uncertainty on the part of clinicians further complicates prognostic communication with patients. Evidence also suggests that many oncologists avoid or rarely engage in prognosis-related communication and/or lack skills in this area. Although communication skills training interventions can have a positive impact on complex communication skills for some clinicians, there is no one-size-fits-all approach to improving patient-clinician communication about prognosis. Yet improving patient understanding of prognosis is critical, because patient understanding of prognosis is linked with end-of-life care outcomes. Solutions to this problem will likely require a combination of interventions beyond communication skills training programs, including enhanced use of other cancer clinicians, such as oncology nurses and social workers, increased use of palliative care specialists, and organizational support to facilitate advance care planning.

http://ascopubs.org/doi/pdfdirect/10.1200/EDBK_201211

Voir la revue «American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual meeting»

Autres numéros de la revue «American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual meeting»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

"How much time do I have?" : communicating pr...

Article indépendant | LEBLANC, Thomas W. | American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual meeting | n°38

Prognostication is the science by which clinicians estimate a patient's expected outcome. A robust literature shows that many patients with advanced cancer have inaccurate perceptions of their prognosis, thus raising questions abo...

Palliative care for patients with hematologic...

Article indépendant | KAYASTHA, Neha | Expert review of hematology | n°9 | vol.15

INTRODUCTION: Palliative care for patients with cancer, and more recently for patients with hematologic malignancies, has increasingly been shown to be beneficial, with mounting evidence pointing to its vast benefits both to patie...

Updates on strategies to integrate palliative...

Article | SANTIVASI, Wil L. | Hematology. American society of hematology. Education program | n°1 | vol.2024

Pas de résumé.

De la même série

Addressing barriers in palliative care for ru...

Article indépendant | WEISS, Matthias | American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual meeting | n°3 | vol.45

Thirty-two million Americans live in rural counties and have no access to multidisciplinary cancer care, and patients with cancer describe a greater number of unfavorable social determinants of health (SDoH), experience more serio...

Integrating palliative care into the manageme...

Article indépendant | MASEL, Eva K. | American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual meeting | n°3 | vol.44

Palliative care (PC) plays a critical role in managing the difficulties associated with genitourinary malignancies. Its primary aim is to improve the overall health of patients, provide support to both patients and their caregiver...

Integrating palliative care and hematologic m...

Article indépendant | EL-JAWAHRI, Areej | American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual meeting | n°3 | vol.44

Patients with hematologic malignancies (HMs) struggle with immense physical and psychological symptom burden, which negatively affect their quality of life (QOL) throughout the continuum of illness. These patients are often faced ...

Transformative peer connections : early exper...

Article indépendant | TSANG, Mazie | American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual meeting | n°3 | vol.44

The integration of palliative care into routine oncology practice is the standard of care by most leading cancer organizations. Palliative medicine helps to deliver higher quality of care at a lower cost. However, there are barrie...

Let us have the conversation: serious illness...

Article indépendant | SHILLING, Danielle M. | American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational book. American Society of Clinical Oncology. Annual meeting | n°3 | vol.44

Serious illness communications are crucial elements of care delivery for patients with cancer. High-quality serious illness communications are composed of open, honest discussions between patients, caregivers, and clinicians regar...

Chargement des enrichissements...