Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Women ≥70 years with low-risk breast cancer face nuanced therapy decisions. Using qualitative analysis, we aimed to determine how oncologists and patients integrate geriatric considerations into complex treatment conversations.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: We recruited women aged ≥70, newly diagnosed with clinical T1-2N0 hormone receptor-positive/HER2-negative disease between October 2020 and March 2023 from a large cancer center and audio-recorded and transcribed their consults with surgical, medical, and radiation oncologists. We identified geriatric issues included in conversational content and the dynamics of patient/oncologist communication. Data collection and analysis were simultaneously performed. We also assessed participant decision-making preferences, frailty, and life expectancy.
RESULTS: Of 48 eligible patients approached, 27 (56 %) participated with eight surgical oncologists, 17 with 11 medical oncologists, and four with three radiation oncologists (n = 48 consultations recorded). Fourteen patients (48 %) were ≥ 75 years, 23 were non-Hispanic White (76 %). Patients preferred to share (n = 15, 58 %) or make their own treatment decisions (n = 10, 39 %), rather than defer to the oncologist. Oncologists presented an explicit treatment choice in 16 conversations (35 %). Chronological age was discussed in 27 (56 %) conversations, comorbidities in 44 (92 %), and multimorbidity in two (4 %). Other geriatric considerations were discussed in the minority of conversations [physiologic age: 20 (42 %); function: 20 (42 %); quality-of-life: 5 (10 %); life expectancy: 5 (10 %); polypharmacy: 2 (4 %)].
DISCUSSION: Despite numerous treatment options, oncologists neither commonly offer older women with low-risk breast cancer explicit treatment choices, nor discuss geriatric issues besides comorbidity. Training oncologists in communication around geriatric issues may lead to more person-centered breast cancer care.