RESUMO
In search of open minds and shared consent - Information, treatment options and postoperative care from the patient's perspective Abstract. This paper addresses knowledge gaps which are prone to handicap the ongoing communication process between medical / care personnel and patients of breast cancer, due to everyday routine and presumed lack of time. The respective qualitative studies do point to divergent expectations with regards to medical consultations and indicate that patients' satisfaction with therapeutic measures, which were decided in advance, might be improved. Three exemplary aspects of doctor-patient communication are then looked at closer: first the variety of treatment options offered, second the risk of expressing unconscious bias regarding patients' physical appearance and identity, and third the increasingly acknowledged desire of breast cancer patients to consult ( additionally, not alternatively) with other patients that are, or were previously affected by breast cancer and confronted with the decisions this condition entails.
Assuntos
Comunicação , Relações Médico-Paciente , Humanos , Consentimento Livre e Esclarecido , Satisfação do Paciente , Cuidados Pós-OperatóriosRESUMO
PURPOSE: Indications for nipple-sparing mastectomy (NSM) have broadened to include the risk reducing setting and locally advanced tumors, which resulted in a dramatic increase in the use of NSM. The Oncoplastic Breast Consortium consensus conference on NSM and immediate reconstruction was held to address a variety of questions in clinical practice and research based on published evidence and expert panel opinion. METHODS: The panel consisted of 44 breast surgeons from 14 countries across four continents with a background in gynecology, general or reconstructive surgery and a practice dedicated to breast cancer, as well as a patient advocate. Panelists presented evidence summaries relating to each topic for debate during the in-person consensus conference. The iterative process in question development, voting, and wording of the recommendations followed the modified Delphi methodology. RESULTS: Consensus recommendations were reached in 35, majority recommendations in 24, and no recommendations in the remaining 12 questions. The panel acknowledged the need for standardization of various aspects of NSM and immediate reconstruction. It endorsed several oncological contraindications to the preservation of the skin and nipple. Furthermore, it recommended inclusion of patients in prospective registries and routine assessment of patient-reported outcomes. Considerable heterogeneity in breast reconstruction practice became obvious during the conference. CONCLUSIONS: In case of conflicting or missing evidence to guide treatment, the consensus conference revealed substantial disagreement in expert panel opinion, which, among others, supports the need for a randomized trial to evaluate the safest and most efficacious reconstruction techniques.