Longitudinal Assessment of Prognostic Understanding in Patients with Advanced Lung Cancer and Its Association with Their Psychological Distress.
Daisuke AraiTakashi SatoIchiro NakachiDaisuke FujisawaMari TakeuchiYasunori SatoIchiro KawadaHiroyuki YasudaShinnosuke IkemuraHideki TeraiShigenari NukagaTakashi InoueMorio NakamuraYoshitaka OyamadaTakeshi TerashimaKoichi SayamaFumitake SaitoFumio SakamakiKatsuhiko NaokiKoichi FukunagaKenzo SoejimaPublished in: The oncologist (2021)
This study demonstrated that approximately 20% of patients with advanced lung cancer had an inaccurate understanding about their prognosis, not only at the time of diagnosis but also at the later time points. Being consistently accurate in prognostic understanding was significantly associated with elevated levels of psychological distress. Although accurate prognostic understanding is essential for decision making for treatment and advance care planning, health care providers should be aware of psychological burdens in patients that accept their severe prognosis accurately. Appropriate care and support for such patients are warranted from diagnosis over time.