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Shared decision-making quality and decisional regret in patients with low-risk superficial basal cell carcinoma: A prospective, multicenter cohort study

Andrea Catalan-Griffiths, Paola Pasquali, Salvador Arias‐Santiago, Pedro Valeron, Antonio Martínez‐López, María Luz Negrín, Israel John Thuissard Vasallo, Cristina Andreu‐Vázquez, Azael Freites‐Martínez

2023JAAD International11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background Many therapies are available to treat low-risk superficial basal cell carcinoma (lr-sBCC), which may complicate the shared decision-making (SDM) process. Objective To assess the SDM process of patients and physicians when deciding lr-sBCC therapy as well as the factors that may influence the SDM process. Methods A prospective, multicenter cohort study was conducted over 18 months, from October 2018 to April 2020, in 3 tertiary university hospitals and 1 private hospital. Results This study included 107 patients. There was a weak positive correlation between Shared Decision-Making Questionnaire-Patient version (SDM-Q-9) and Shared Decision-Making Questionnaire-Physician version (SDM-Q-Doc) (Spearman's correlation coefficient [ r s ] [105] = 0.21; P = .03). Most patients (71%) chose a nonsurgical treatment after the SDM process. Patients with higher satisfaction with the SDM had lower decisional conflict and decisional regret ( P < .001). Patients aged >80 years had higher rates of significant decisional conflict. When evaluating treatment decisions, the highest median score for decisional conflict (22, IQR [16]; P = .01) was observed among patients who chose a surgical excision. Limitations Patients may have self-selected to participate. Conclusion This study suggests that some patients may prefer less invasive therapies for lr-sBCC. The SDM process may reduce decisional conflict and decisional regret.

Topics & Concepts

RegretMedicineProspective cohort studyCohortPatient satisfactionCohort studyBasal cell carcinomaInternal medicinePhysical therapySurgeryBasal cellMachine learningComputer sciencePatient-Provider Communication in HealthcarePalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesNonmelanoma Skin Cancer Studies