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首页> 外文期刊>Medical decision making: An international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making >How Do Older Adults Consider Age, Life Expectancy, Quality of Life, and Physician Recommendations When Making Cancer Screening Decisions? Results from a National Survey Using a Discrete Choice Experiment
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How Do Older Adults Consider Age, Life Expectancy, Quality of Life, and Physician Recommendations When Making Cancer Screening Decisions? Results from a National Survey Using a Discrete Choice Experiment

机译:老年人如何考虑在制定癌症筛查决策时的年龄,预期寿命,生活质量和医生建议? 通过离散选择实验的国家调查结果

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Background. Older adults with limited life expectancy frequently receive cancer screening, although on average, harms outweigh benefits. We examined the influence of life expectancy on older adults' cancer screening decisions relative to three other factors. Methods. Adults aged 65+ years (N = 1272) were recruited from a national online survey panel. Using a discrete choice experiment, we systematically varied a hypothetical patient's life expectancy, age, quality of life, and physician's recommendation and asked whether the participant would choose screening. Participants were randomized to questions about colonoscopy or prostate-specific antigen/mammography screenings. Logistic regression produced preference weights that quantified the relative influence of the 4 factors on screening decisions. Results. 879 older adults completed the survey, 660 of whom varied their screening choices in response to the 4 factors we tested. The age of the hypothetical patient had the largest influence on choosing screening: the effect of age being 65 versus 85 years had a preference weight of 2.44 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.22, 2.65). Life expectancy (10 versus 1 year) had the second largest influence (preference weight: 1.64, CI: 1.41, 1.87). Physician recommendation (screen versus do not screen) and quality of life (good versus poor) were less influential, with preference weights of 0.90 (CI: 0.72, 1.08) and 0.68 (CI: 0.52, 0.83), respectively. Conclusions. While clinical practice guidelines increasingly use life expectancy in addition to age to guide screening decisions, we find that age is the most influential factor, independent of life expectancy, quality of life, and physician recommendation, in older adults' cancer screening choices. Strategies to reduce overscreening should consider the importance patients give to continuing screening at younger ages, even when life expectancy is limited.
机译:背景。寿命有限有限的老年人经常接受癌症筛查,尽管平均而言,损害效果造成损害。我们研究了预期寿命对老年人癌症筛查决策相对于其他三个因素的影响。方法。从国家在线调查小组招募了65岁以上的成年人(n = 1272)。使用离散选择实验,我们系统地改变了假设的患者的预期寿命,年龄,生活质量和医生的推荐,并询问参与者是否会选择筛选。参与者被随机分配给关于结肠镜检查或前列腺特异性抗原/乳房摄影筛查的问题。 Logistic回归产生的偏好重量,这些重量量化了4个因素对筛选决策的相对影响。结果。 879名老年人完成了调查,660名,其中660名,他们的筛选选择响应了我们测试的4个因素。假设患者的年龄对选择筛选的影响最大:年龄为65与85岁的效果偏好重量为2.44(95%置信区间[CI]:2.22,2.65)。预期寿命(10与1年)具有第二大影响力(优惠重量:1.64,CI:1.41,1.87)。医生推荐(屏幕与屏幕不屏幕)和生活质量(良好的与差的)不太有影响力,偏好重量为0.90(CI:0.72,1.08)和0.68(CI:0.52,0.83)。结论。虽然临床实践指南越来越多地使用寿命,但除了年龄以指导筛查决策之外,我们发现年龄是最有影响力的因素,独立于预期寿命,生活质量和医生推荐,在老年人的癌症筛查选择中。减少过度筛选的策略应考虑重要患者在较年轻的年龄持续筛选,即使预期寿命有限。

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