Most patients were well informed, but important gaps remain, especially concerning information about prognosis and alternatives to anticancer treatment. These gaps invite the question concerning whether patients are led toward anticancer treatment.
The designation of the paper as original article has been retracted due to redundant publication. The original work presented in this report was submitted to the Journal of Clinical Oncology several months before the Plenary session of the MASCC meeting in Copenhagen in June 2001, and it was subsequently published with the authors Gattellari M, Voigt KJ, Butow PN, Tattersall MHN When the treatment goal is not cure: Are cancer patients equipped to make informed decisions? in the Journal of Clinical Oncology 20: 503-13, 2002. The SCC paper was intended as a plenary paper only, and should be referenced as such. The authors regret any confusion as a result of the SCC publication of their plenary paper.
We determined the extent to which Australian patients with incurable cancer are informed of their prognosis and treatment options by their oncologists and are encouraged to participate in treatment decisions. To this end, 118 patients with incurable cancer presenting for an initial consultation with one of nine oncologists in two Sydney teaching hospitals were enrolled in the study. Consultations were audio-taped. We developed a coding system to assess the disclosure of information considered necessary to equip patients to make informed decisions and to evaluate doctor encouragement of patient participation in treatment decision-making. Patient recall, satisfaction, and anxiety and their perceptions of the decision-making process were assessed. Most patients were informed about the aim of cancer treatment (84.7%), that their disease was incurable (74.6%) and about life expectancy (57.6%); 44.1% were presented with an alternative to cancer treatments, such as supportive care, 36.3% were informed how anticancer treatment would affect quality of life, and 29.7% were offered a management choice. Patient understanding was checked in only 10% of consultations. While greater information disclosure did not appear to elevate anxiety levels, greater patient participation in the decision making process was associated with increased anxiety levels (P=0.0005), which persisted over a 2-week time span. Most patients were well informed, but important gaps remain, especially concerning information about prognosis and alternatives to cancer treatment.
Hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT)‐associated (TA) thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) is an acquired disorder and a potentially life‐threatening complication after allogeneic HSCT. TA‐TMA causes endothelial damage and results in micro‐thrombi in capillaries and arterioles. Early detection and treatment of complications associated with TA‐TMA might improve outcomes. Purtscher‐like retinopathy (PLR) is associated with micro‐thrombi that occlude the retinal arteries and cause retinal injury. PLR has been associated with multiple entities, including HUS and TTP, but has not previously been described in the setting of TA‐TMA. Here, we describe an 18‐year‐old male who underwent a mismatched unrelated donor HSCT for relapsed acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The patient was diagnosed with TA‐TMA based on standard defined criteria. He presented with acute onset of blurred vision with findings of multiple white retinal patches, retinal hemorrhages, and macular edema, thought initially to be hypertensive retinopathy. However, on further evaluation using fluorescein angiography and optical coherence tomography, the diagnosis was determined to be PLR. The patient was treated with intravitreal steroid injections (triamcinolone acetonide) with dramatic improvement of vision. The aim of this report is to make clinicians aware of PLR as a potential ocular complication associated with TA‐TMA and that prompt intervention might reverse visual impairment.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.