A novel patient decision aid for aftercare in breast cancer patients: A promising tool to reduce costs by individualizing aftercare

Linda A. Klaassen*, Carmen D. Dirksen, Liesbeth J. Boersma, Ciska Hoving, B-Beslist-Grp

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

Objective: A patient decision aid (PtDA), was developed to support breast cancer patients making choices about their aftercare. The aim of this pilot was to test the effects of the PtDA on Shared Decision Making (SDM), Decision Evaluation (DES) in patients, consultation time, choice of aftercare and hospital costs.

Methods: A prospective before-and-after study including a control (no PtDA-usage) and experimental group (PtDA-usage during consultation) was conducted in six hospitals. Patients were offered a choice between intensive (face-to-face consultations) and less intensive (telephonic or on demand consultations) aftercare. All patients filled out three validated questionnaires (baseline (TO), directly after the consultation (T1), three months later (T2)), assessing demographics (TO), SDM(T1) and DES (TI, T2). Hospital costs and choice of aftercare were assessed from the patients' files (T2). Effect sizes (eta(2)(p): 0.01 = small; 0.06 = medium; 0.14 = large; phi: 0.1 = small, 0.3 = medium, 0.5 = large) and p-values were calculated using both univariate and multivariate GLMs, a repeated measures GLM and chi-square-tests.

Results: A small improvement in SDM (eta(2)(p) = 0.02) and an effect (eta(2)(p) = 0.10) on DES was found in the experimental group. Significantly more PtDA-users (51% vs. 29%, phi = 0.22) chose less intensive aftercare, leading to a small reduction of hospital costs (122 vs. 92 Euro, eta(2)(p) = 0.01), and a large increase in average consultation time (12.5 min; eta(2)(p) = 0.29).

Conclusion: This pilot study showed promising effects of the PtDA on SDM and hospital costs. The PtDA can be developed further to potentially reduce the increased consultation time. (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)144-150
Number of pages7
JournalBreast
Volume41
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2018

Keywords

  • Decision aid
  • Aftercare
  • Shared decision making
  • Cancer survivorship
  • DISCRETE-CHOICE EXPERIMENT
  • FOLLOW-UP CARE
  • PREFERENCES
  • MANAGEMENT
  • SUPPORT
  • WOMEN

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