Brown Meagan C, Snidarich Madison, Budak Jehan Z, Murphy Nicholas, Giustini Nicholas, Romine Perrin E, Weiner Bryan J, Caverly Tanner, Crothers Kristina, Triplette Matthew
Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute (M. C. Brown), the Department of Epidemiology (M. C. B.), the Department of Global Health (B. J W.), the Department of Health Services (B. J. W.), University of Washington School of Public Health, the Division of Public Health Sciences (M. C. B., M. S., and M. T.), Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, the Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (J. Z. B.), the Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine (N. M., K. C., and M. T.), the Division of Hematology and Oncology (N. G.), Department of Medicine, University of Washington, the Swedish Cancer Institute (P. E. R.), the Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Healthcare System (K. C.), Seattle, WA, and the Department of Learning Health Sciences (T. C.), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor VA Center for Clinical Management Research, Ann Arbor, MI.
CHEST Pulm. 2024 Sep;2(3). doi: 10.1016/j.chpulm.2024.100044. Epub 2024 Feb 19.
People with HIV are both at elevated risk of lung cancer and at high risk of multimorbidity, which makes shared decision-making (SDM) for lung cancer screening (LCS) in people with HIV complex. Currently no known tools have been adapted for SDM in people with HIV.
Can an SDM decision aid be adapted to include HIV-specific measures with input from both people with HIV and their providers?
This study used qualitative methods including focus groups of people with HIV and interviews with HIV care providers to adapt and iterate an SDM tool for people with HIV. Eligible participants were those with HIV enrolled in an HIV primary care clinic who met age and smoking eligibility criteria for LCS and HIV care providers at the clinic. Both the focus groups and interviews included semistructured discussions of SDM and decision aid elements for people with HIV. We used a framework-guided thematic analysis, mapping themes onto the Health Equity Implementation framework.
Forty-three people with HIV participated in eight focus groups; 10 providers were interviewed. Key themes from patients included broad interest in adapting LCS SDM specifically for people with HIV, a preference for clear LCS recommendations, and the need for positive framing emphasizing survival. Providers were enthusiastic about personalized LCS risk assessments and point-of-care tools. Both patients and providers gave mixed views on the usefulness of HIV-specific risk measures in patient-facing tools. Themes were used to adapt a personalized and flexible SDM tool for LCS in people with HIV.
People with HIV and providers were enthusiastic about specific tools for SDM that are personalized and tailored for people with HIV, that make recommendations, and that inform LCS decision-making. Divergent views on presenting patient-facing quantitative risk assessments suggests that these elements could be optional but available for review. This tool may have usefulness in complex decision-making for LCS in this population and currently is being evaluated in a pilot prospective trial.
艾滋病毒感染者患肺癌的风险较高,且患多种疾病的风险也很高,这使得艾滋病毒感染者的肺癌筛查共同决策(SDM)变得复杂。目前尚无已知工具适用于艾滋病毒感染者的共同决策。
能否调整共同决策辅助工具,纳入来自艾滋病毒感染者及其医疗服务提供者的意见,并包含针对艾滋病毒的特定措施?
本研究采用定性方法,包括艾滋病毒感染者焦点小组和对艾滋病毒护理提供者的访谈,以调整并反复改进针对艾滋病毒感染者的共同决策工具。符合条件的参与者为在艾滋病毒初级保健诊所登记的艾滋病毒感染者,他们符合肺癌筛查的年龄和吸烟资格标准,以及该诊所的艾滋病毒护理提供者。焦点小组和访谈都包括针对艾滋病毒感染者的共同决策和决策辅助要素的半结构化讨论。我们采用框架引导的主题分析,将主题映射到健康公平实施框架上。
43名艾滋病毒感染者参加了8个焦点小组;采访了10名提供者。患者的关键主题包括广泛希望专门为艾滋病毒感染者调整肺癌筛查共同决策,倾向于明确的肺癌筛查建议,以及需要强调生存的积极框架。提供者对个性化肺癌筛查风险评估和即时护理工具充满热情。患者和提供者对面向患者的工具中艾滋病毒特定风险措施的有用性看法不一。这些主题被用于为艾滋病毒感染者调整个性化且灵活的肺癌筛查共同决策工具。
艾滋病毒感染者和提供者对为艾滋病毒感染者量身定制、个性化、能提出建议并为肺癌筛查决策提供信息的共同决策特定工具充满热情。对于呈现面向患者的定量风险评估存在不同观点,这表明这些要素可以是可选的,但可供查看。该工具可能对这一人群肺癌筛查的复杂决策有用,目前正在一项前瞻性试点试验中进行评估。