This study investigated the impact of patients’ locus of control during a treatment decision on their QOL and decision satisfaction over time. Patients who experienced a shared decision or a patient-directed decision had significantly better physical functioning at 4 months post-decision than patients who experienced a physician-directed decision. Importantly, there were no significant differences in physical functioning among the DLOC groups at baseline. These findings suggest that patients who are more involved in their treatment decision-making may more successfully maintain their physical functioning than those who are less actively engaged. Therefore, active engagement in decision-making can increase QOL for patients. The Federal Drug Administration considers physical functioning and other EORTC QOL metrics in the regulatory review process for novel therapeutics, which speaks to the importance of maintaining QOL in patients undergoing cancer treatment.[16]
Other QOL domains (i.e., social, emotional, cognitive, and role functioning) were not significantly associated with the degree of patient engagement in decision-making in this study. The underlying reasons for physical functioning potentially being affected by DLOC are unknown, but it may be related to heightened self-efficacy empowering patients to engage in decision-making and in activities that strengthen physical functioning. It is possible that the greater levels of pain reported by patients who reported physician-directed decisions were associated with poorer disease prognosis, more advanced disease, or other factors associated with declining physical function. Other QOL domains may be less dramatically affected by disease related decline than physical functioning. However, in separate therapeutic trials, emotional/social/cognitive/role functioning domains appeared to be affected by disease progression, suggesting that DLOC may be related to the effects seen in physical functioning.[17]
Over time, decision satisfaction increased among patients who experienced a shared decision or a patient-directed decision. However, patients who reported experiencing a physician-directed decision exhibited declining satisfaction with their treatment decision. This trend suggests patients may be more satisfied with their treatment decisions in the long-term if they feel they had a more active role in the decision. Many patients with mPC will have inevitable declines in general health and wellbeing, and a subset will experience decreased decision satisfaction or regret.[18] Our study similarly found a significant positive association between overall health status and decision satisfaction. For patients experiencing declining health, it is possible they may come to regret their treatment plan if they felt the decision was made primarily by the physician, even if they did not initially feel negatively toward the decision.[19] Conversely, patients who are empowered to play an active role in decision-making and feel confident they made the best choice for themselves may maintain their satisfaction in the decision, despite declining health.
This study characterized patient preferences for DLOC and physician communication techniques. Most patients preferred a shared decision rather than a physician or patient-dominated decision-making process. Of those that did not prefer a shared decision, there was a greater preference for patient-directed compared with physician-directed decisions. While there is limited data regarding preferences for DLOC in mPC, our finding that the majority of patients prefer SDM is consistent with studies in other fields of oncology and beyond.[20] Other studies have suggested that younger generations value SDM more than the older populations that currently make up the majority of cancer patients. This indicates that collaborating with patients will likely become essential to the training and practice of early-career physicians.[21]
The five most identified preferences for communication techniques reported by patients as important to aiding the decision-making process were as follows: discussing next steps, involving patients in decisions, understanding patients’ health concerns, speaking in patient-friendly terms, and sharing information as requested by patients. These are similar to those previously reported by patients as being helpful based on their experiences making decisions.[7] These techniques are common examples of ways for physicians to demonstrate empathy, which has been correlated to patient perception of SDM. Others have stated that a patient’s perception of shared decision making may be more about feeling that the physician has heard and processed the patient’s cognitive and emotional needs, concerns, and preferences than about the patient actively deliberating over treatment options.[22] The proportion of patients valuing communication techniques largely did not differ significantly according to DLOC preference. However, patients who preferred a physician-directed decision were less likely to value “involving patients in decisions” compared with those who preferred shared or patient-directed decisions.
Our study has limitations that should be considered. First, the sample size was relatively small, particularly in patients with DLOCs other than SDM, but was identified as a sample size that was feasible to enroll and sufficient to identify clinically meaningful changes in QOL. Second, although participants were enrolled from two separate institutions, both have populations that are predominantly White and insured. Further, only patients who felt comfortable with reading English surveys were eligible to participate, which restricted participation from non-English speaking patients and limits generalizability. Finally, this study was designed as a relatively short-term longitudinal investigation. Whether these findings would change with longer follow up is unknown. Additional studies are needed to investigate these findings in larger and more diverse populations over a longer period.
In conclusion, our study suggests that greater patient involvement in decision-making may provide benefits to patients in the form of improved physical functioning and greater decision satisfaction. This finding is particularly notable given the recognition by the scientific community, including the Food and Drug Administration, of the importance of physical functioning on patient outcomes.[22] Our study identified techniques, such as asking degree of involvement desired and focus on follow-up, used by physicians that were most valued by patients to achieve shared decisions. Adoption of these often-simple techniques may improve outcomes in patients with mPC.