Patients Report More Satisfaction With Multidisciplinary Care Versus Serial Care for Lung Cancer

June 02, 2018

Despite the prevalence of multidisciplinary (MD) care for cancer, rigorous studies comparing it to serial care (SC) are lacking. To address the literature gap, researchers explored the use of MD versus SC for lung cancer and presented the findings at the 2018 American Society of Clinical Oncology Annual Meeting (http://abstracts.asco.org/214/AbstView_214_223713.html).

Researchers used an observational study (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02123797) to compare the differences in using MD versus SC for patients with newly diagnosed lung cancer in the same U.S. healthcare system.

At baseline, three months, and six months, patients completed several satisfaction measures that were developed from the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (https://www.ahrq.gov/cahps/index.html) as well as the National Health Interview Survey (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhis/index.htm) “Perceived Financial Burden of Care” instrument.

The study enrolled 456 patients (159 patients for MD and 297 patients for SC). Each group had similar genders and health insurance status. The MD cohort was slightly older in age (69 years versus 66 years in the SC group) and had more racial minorities (37% versus 29% in the SC group).

Results showed that the MD cohort saw a greater general improvement over time. Patients reported satisfaction with the treatment plan (p = 0.0036) and the quality of care received from the care team (p = 0.0377).

Study results also demonstrated that a perceived financial burden of care increased slightly over time for the MD cohort but decreased slightly for SC (p = 0.0352). Patients in the MD cohort also perceived their cancer care to be better than care received by other patients (p = 0.0025).

“Compared with SC, MD recipients perceived their care to be better than that received by other patients with lung cancer and had greater improvements over the course of treatment in satisfaction with their treatment plan and care team. These positive patient-reported outcomes occurred despite slightly greater perceived financial burden of care,” the authors concluded.


Copyright © 2018 by the Oncology Nursing Society. User has permission to print one copy for personal or unit-based educational use. Contact pubpermissions@ons.org for quantity reprints or permission to adapt, excerpt, post online, or reuse ONS Voice content for any other purpose.