TY - JOUR
T1 - Clinical equipoise and shared decision-making in pulmonary nodule management a survey of American Thoracic Society Clinicians
AU - Iaccarino, Jonathan M.
AU - Simmons, James
AU - Gould, Michael K.
AU - Slatore, Christopher G.
AU - Woloshin, Steven
AU - Schwartz, Lisa M.
AU - Wiener, Renda Soylemez
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 by the American Thoracic Society.
PY - 2017/6
Y1 - 2017/6
N2 - Rationale: Guidelines for pulmonary nodule evaluation suggest a variety of strategies, reflecting the lack of high-quality evidence demonstrating the superiority of any one approach. It is unclear whether clinicians agree that multiple management options are appropriate at different levels of risk and whether this impacts their decision-making approaches with patients. Objectives: To assess clinicians' perceptions of the appropriateness of various diagnostic strategies, approach to decision-making, and perceived clinical equipoise in pulmonary nodule evaluation. Methods: We developed and administered a web-based survey in March andApril, 2014 to clinicianmembers of theAmerican Thoracic Society. The primary outcome was perceived appropriateness of pulmonary nodule evaluation strategies in three clinical vignettes with different malignancy risk.We compared responses to guideline recommendations and analyzed clinician characteristics associated with a reported shared decision-making approach.We also assessed clinicians' likelihood to enroll patients in hypothetical randomized trials comparing nodule evaluation strategies. Results: Of 5,872 American Thoracic Society members e-mailed, 1,444 opened the e-mail and 428 eligible clinicians participated in the survey (response rate, 30.0% among those who opened the invitation; 7% overall). The mean number of options considered appropriate increased with pretest probability of cancer, ranging from1.8 (SD, 1.2) for the low-risk case to 3.5 (1.1) for the high-risk case (P,0.0001). As recommended by guidelines, the proportion that deemed surgical resection as an appropriate option also increasedwith cancer risk (P, 0.0001). One-half of clinicians (50.4%) reported engaging in shared decision-making with patients for pulmonary nodule management; this was more commonly reported by clinicians with more years of experience (P = 0.01) and those who reported greater comfort in managing pulmonary nodules (P = 0.005). Although one-half (49.9%) deemed the evidence for pulmonary nodule evaluation to be strong, most clinicians were willing to enroll patients in randomized trials to compare nodulemanagement strategies in all risk categories (low risk, 87.6%; moderate risk, 89.7%; high risk, 63.0%). Conclusions: Consistent with guideline recommendations, clinicians embrace multiple options for pulmonary nodule evaluation and many are open to shared decision-making. Clinicians support the need for randomized clinical trials to strengthen the evidence for nodule evaluation, which will further improve decision-making.
AB - Rationale: Guidelines for pulmonary nodule evaluation suggest a variety of strategies, reflecting the lack of high-quality evidence demonstrating the superiority of any one approach. It is unclear whether clinicians agree that multiple management options are appropriate at different levels of risk and whether this impacts their decision-making approaches with patients. Objectives: To assess clinicians' perceptions of the appropriateness of various diagnostic strategies, approach to decision-making, and perceived clinical equipoise in pulmonary nodule evaluation. Methods: We developed and administered a web-based survey in March andApril, 2014 to clinicianmembers of theAmerican Thoracic Society. The primary outcome was perceived appropriateness of pulmonary nodule evaluation strategies in three clinical vignettes with different malignancy risk.We compared responses to guideline recommendations and analyzed clinician characteristics associated with a reported shared decision-making approach.We also assessed clinicians' likelihood to enroll patients in hypothetical randomized trials comparing nodule evaluation strategies. Results: Of 5,872 American Thoracic Society members e-mailed, 1,444 opened the e-mail and 428 eligible clinicians participated in the survey (response rate, 30.0% among those who opened the invitation; 7% overall). The mean number of options considered appropriate increased with pretest probability of cancer, ranging from1.8 (SD, 1.2) for the low-risk case to 3.5 (1.1) for the high-risk case (P,0.0001). As recommended by guidelines, the proportion that deemed surgical resection as an appropriate option also increasedwith cancer risk (P, 0.0001). One-half of clinicians (50.4%) reported engaging in shared decision-making with patients for pulmonary nodule management; this was more commonly reported by clinicians with more years of experience (P = 0.01) and those who reported greater comfort in managing pulmonary nodules (P = 0.005). Although one-half (49.9%) deemed the evidence for pulmonary nodule evaluation to be strong, most clinicians were willing to enroll patients in randomized trials to compare nodulemanagement strategies in all risk categories (low risk, 87.6%; moderate risk, 89.7%; high risk, 63.0%). Conclusions: Consistent with guideline recommendations, clinicians embrace multiple options for pulmonary nodule evaluation and many are open to shared decision-making. Clinicians support the need for randomized clinical trials to strengthen the evidence for nodule evaluation, which will further improve decision-making.
KW - Guideline adherence
KW - Pulmonary nodules
KW - Shared decision-making
KW - Surveys and questionnaires
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U2 - 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201609-727OC
DO - 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201609-727OC
M3 - Review article
C2 - 28278389
AN - SCOPUS:85020200959
SN - 2325-6621
VL - 14
SP - 968
EP - 975
JO - Annals of the American Thoracic Society
JF - Annals of the American Thoracic Society
IS - 6
ER -