Experiences of general practitioners and medical specialists with incurable cancer patients with a protracted disease trajectory: A focus group study.

03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine 3. Good health
DOI: 10.1200/jco.2019.37.15_suppl.e23010 Publication Date: 2019-05-28T13:58:45Z
ABSTRACT
e23010 Background: Advances in oncology have resulted in prolonged disease trajectories in patients with incurable cancer. In this disease-phase, patients are aware that cancer is incurable but they do not approach the last phase-of-life yet. We examined experiences and wishes of GPs and specialists concerning appropriate care-provision, delivered by GPs. Methods: We performed 6 focus groups in different regions in the Netherlands; 3 homogenous groups (N=15 GPs) and 3 heterogenous groups (N=23 GPs and medical specialists). Data were analysed with thematic content-analysis. Results: During the first focus-groups, the protracted disease phase was not acknowledged as a separate one; in the last focus-groups, however, this disease-phase received more attention. Physicians clearly distinghuished this trajectory from the palliative / terminal disease phase, partly because many patients did not experience severe physical problems. Most GPs preferred to be involved in the care of these patients as this would enable them to easily guide patients in their last phase-of-life. In these patients, GPs experienced difficulties in estimation of prognosis and advice of further treatment, partly because of insecurity of treatment side-effects of immunotherapy. Further, many physicians experienced difficulties in labeling this disease phase. ‘Stable’; ‘chronic’; and ‘Phase X’ were regularly mentioned. Medical specialists were more frequent involved with these patients but preferred to involve GPs as much as possible. They however also realised that this would become more difficult in future, given the growing group of patients in this disease phase. Conclusions: In the protracted disease phase, patients often do not experience severe physical symptoms. They often do not approach their patient for possible psycho-social problems. Apart from medical specialists, tools to easily communicate across specialties to optimise care need to be further explored.
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