Question
What are the challenges of the current decision-making process for treatment of low-risk differentiated thyroid cancer (LRDTC)?
Findings
This systematic review and meta-ethnography of 12 qualitative and/or mixed-method studies on patient and clinician experiences with LRDTC treatment decision-making found a bimodal distribution divided by either a fear of disease progression or of adverse effects and decline in quality of life. In addition, clinicians struggled to identify and understand patient concerns, and recommendations were biased by the clinician’s perceptions of the patient’s risk tolerance and anxiety.
Meaning
The findings of the systematic review and meta-ethnography suggest that without exploring patient concerns and preferences, LRDTC treatment decisions may not reflect the patient’s values, goals, and long-term wishes, which may be a factor in the overtreatment of LRDTC.
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