Oncologists often shelter patients with stage IV cancer from the realities of their diagnoses, according to a new article.
As reported in a recent 鈥減erspective鈥 article by a researcher under the auspices of 秘密研究所 Winthrop Hospital鈥檚 Research Institute, such practices deprive patients of 鈥渁 full understanding of their poor prognosis, possibly compromising their ability to make informed choices.鈥
鈥淲e hope this article causes a strong reaction in the professional oncology community, and stirs much-needed debate on the topic,鈥 says the author, Donald Brand, PhD, adjunct professor at and former director of health outcomes research at 秘密研究所 Winthrop Hospital.
Dr. Brand鈥檚 article, titled 鈥淭he Stage IV Shuffle: Elusiveness of Straight Talk About Advanced Cancer,鈥 .
鈥淚 recommend straight talk about late-stage cancer that can give patients realistic hopes instead of false hopes that are apt to betray later on,鈥 says Dr. Brand. 鈥淥ncologists may be well-meaning in their efforts to mitigate the shock of bad news, but glossing over the facts of efficacy may explain why so many patients believe their metastatic cancer can be cured and why so few patients with advanced cancer decline chemotherapy.鈥
Dr. Brand argues that the same frank communications are needed from health educators as they prepare materials about advanced cancer, and from researchers as they report study findings. The latter, says Dr. Brand, often focus on statistics that involve tumor response to treatments rather than relaying survival statistics.
Dr. Brand points out that, in recent years, more than half of clinical trials leading to approval of drugs by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for oncologic indications relied on outcomes such as those related to the suppression of tumor growth鈥攔ather than on survival, which 鈥渢ends to make results look more favorable.鈥
According to Dr. Brand鈥檚 article, pointing out to a patient that treatment is unlikely to help 鈥渄oes not take away all hope, as some defenders of the stage IV shuffle might argue. 鈥淐andid discussion can give the patient realistic hopes鈥 While it is not the clinician鈥檚 job to challenge a patient who hopes to beat the odds, it is the clinician鈥檚 job to disclose the odds when a patient wants to know.鈥
鈥淭he Stage IV Shuffle: Elusiveness of Straight Talk About Advanced Cancer鈥 currently appears online in the Journal of General Internal Medicine and will appear in print in an upcoming journal issue.
Media Inquiries
Anne Kazel-Wilcox
Phone: 516-663-4999
anne.kazel@nyulangone.org