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Patient, Care Partner, and Physician Voices in Treatment Decision-Making for Multiple Myeloma.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Dwyer Orr, L; Lin, D; Wu, B; LeBlanc, TW; Faiman, B; Ahlstrom, J; Yung, M; Deering, KL; Kulbokas, V; Feldman, JL; Kline, E; Biran, N
Published in: Patient Prefer Adherence
2024

INTRODUCTION: Treatment decision-making for multiple myeloma (MM) is complex. Individuals involved in decision-making may value treatment attributes differently based on their role as a patient, care partner, or physician. This study describes those attributes, and what is most important by role. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional online survey with consenting adult patients with MM, MM care partners, and physicians treating MM. Respondents were recruited from US panels (Inspire and M3 Global Research) between September and December 2022. Survey items were informed by a targeted literature review, qualitative interviews, and a steering committee comprising clinical experts, a patient advocate, patient, and care partner. Descriptive statistics were generated and reported in aggregate. RESULTS: Email invitations were sent to 8071 Inspire members interested in or posting about MM. Of these, 4427 viewed the invitation, 941 responded, and 156 patients and care partners completed the survey (17% of respondents). For physicians, 5588 were invited via Email by M3 Global Research, with 761 viewing the invitation, 214 accessing the survey link, and 137 completing the survey (64% of respondents). Duration of response, side effects, and patients' quality-of-life (QoL) were the top three treatment attributes selected across the three cohorts; alignment of these attributes was consistent among patients regardless of disease severity. Separately, patients rated QoL and the amount of caregiving needed during/after treatment as the most important factors for future treatment decisions. If more effective MM treatments were offered, care partners were more willing to assume greater family burden (77%) compared to patients (49%), and patients were more accepting of potential serious side effects (50%) than were care partners (34%). CONCLUSION: Patients with MM, care partners, and physicians consider and value various treatment decision-making factors. Recognizing and addressing these differences is critical to meeting patients' preferences, needs, and optimizing patient outcomes.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Patient Prefer Adherence

DOI

ISSN

1177-889X

Publication Date

2024

Volume

18

Start / End Page

2147 / 2158

Location

New Zealand

Related Subject Headings

  • 4203 Health services and systems
  • 1103 Clinical Sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Dwyer Orr, L., Lin, D., Wu, B., LeBlanc, T. W., Faiman, B., Ahlstrom, J., … Biran, N. (2024). Patient, Care Partner, and Physician Voices in Treatment Decision-Making for Multiple Myeloma. Patient Prefer Adherence, 18, 2147–2158. https://doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S474722
Dwyer Orr, Lisa, Dee Lin, Bingcao Wu, Thomas W. LeBlanc, Beth Faiman, Jenny Ahlstrom, Margaret Yung, et al. “Patient, Care Partner, and Physician Voices in Treatment Decision-Making for Multiple Myeloma.Patient Prefer Adherence 18 (2024): 2147–58. https://doi.org/10.2147/PPA.S474722.
Dwyer Orr L, Lin D, Wu B, LeBlanc TW, Faiman B, Ahlstrom J, et al. Patient, Care Partner, and Physician Voices in Treatment Decision-Making for Multiple Myeloma. Patient Prefer Adherence. 2024;18:2147–58.
Dwyer Orr, Lisa, et al. “Patient, Care Partner, and Physician Voices in Treatment Decision-Making for Multiple Myeloma.Patient Prefer Adherence, vol. 18, 2024, pp. 2147–58. Pubmed, doi:10.2147/PPA.S474722.
Dwyer Orr L, Lin D, Wu B, LeBlanc TW, Faiman B, Ahlstrom J, Yung M, Deering KL, Kulbokas V, Feldman JL, Kline E, Biran N. Patient, Care Partner, and Physician Voices in Treatment Decision-Making for Multiple Myeloma. Patient Prefer Adherence. 2024;18:2147–2158.

Published In

Patient Prefer Adherence

DOI

ISSN

1177-889X

Publication Date

2024

Volume

18

Start / End Page

2147 / 2158

Location

New Zealand

Related Subject Headings

  • 4203 Health services and systems
  • 1103 Clinical Sciences