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Decision regret related to urinary diversion choices after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients

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Decision regret related to urinary diversion choices after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients. / Hou, Yinmeng; Chen, Yiqian; Lai, Shicong et al.
In: Cancer Medicine, Vol. 12, No. 4, 28.02.2023, p. 4786-4793.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hou, Y, Chen, Y, Lai, S, Seery, S, Wang, L, Li, X, Liu, H, Qin, C, Li, W, Lu, X, Liu, C, Wang, J & Xu, T 2023, 'Decision regret related to urinary diversion choices after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients', Cancer Medicine, vol. 12, no. 4, pp. 4786-4793. https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.5281

APA

Hou, Y., Chen, Y., Lai, S., Seery, S., Wang, L., Li, X., Liu, H., Qin, C., Li, W., Lu, X., Liu, C., Wang, J., & Xu, T. (2023). Decision regret related to urinary diversion choices after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients. Cancer Medicine, 12(4), 4786-4793. https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.5281

Vancouver

Hou Y, Chen Y, Lai S, Seery S, Wang L, Li X et al. Decision regret related to urinary diversion choices after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients. Cancer Medicine. 2023 Feb 28;12(4):4786-4793. Epub 2022 Oct 21. doi: 10.1002/cam4.5281

Author

Hou, Yinmeng ; Chen, Yiqian ; Lai, Shicong et al. / Decision regret related to urinary diversion choices after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients. In: Cancer Medicine. 2023 ; Vol. 12, No. 4. pp. 4786-4793.

Bibtex

@article{57b493db058945808996c13124b80c5d,
title = "Decision regret related to urinary diversion choices after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients",
abstract = "AIM: To explore factors associated with decision regret after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients.METHODS: This cross-sectional study involved 112 patients, who had received radical bladder cancer resection. Participants were recruited from August 2021 until January 2022. The decision regret scale (DRS), decision conflict scale (DCS), and the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Bladder cancer (FACT-BL) form were used to measure decision regret, decision conflict, and quality of life. Investigator-designed items further explored perceptions involved in decision-making participation and outcomes.RESULTS: The average score for decision regret was 26.21 (SD 15.886), while decision conflict was 20.27 (SD 13.375) and quality of life was 94.74 (SD 20.873). 57.1% of our participants had a little knowledge about the quality of life of patients who chose an alternate urinary diversion method; however, only 13.4% reported having a clear understanding. In addition, 8.9%, 26.8%, and 36.6% thought that quality of life related to alternate decisions was poor, average, or good, respectively. Multiple regression analysis suggested that decision regret is associated with decision conflict, quality of life, and the perceptions that others (who took alternate urinary diversion decisions) had a better quality of life.CONCLUSION: Decision regret is common among Chinese bladder cancer patients, after cystectomy. The prevalence of regret appears to be much higher in Chinese bladder cancer patients compared to similar studies from other regions. Decisions in mainland China are often made by the treating physician or by family members which may cause more profound regret. However, education and economic status are positively related to higher levels of regret which creates questions around knowing, participation, and expectations, which must be explored.",
keywords = "RESEARCH ARTICLE, RESEARCH ARTICLES, China, conflict, decision making, perception, quality of life, urinary bladder neoplasia",
author = "Yinmeng Hou and Yiqian Chen and Shicong Lai and Samuel Seery and Ling Wang and Xiaodan Li and Huixin Liu and Caipeng Qin and Wei Li and Xiangyun Lu and Chunxia Liu and Jia Wang and Tao Xu",
year = "2023",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1002/cam4.5281",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "4786--4793",
journal = "Cancer Medicine",
issn = "2045-7634",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Decision regret related to urinary diversion choices after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients

AU - Hou, Yinmeng

AU - Chen, Yiqian

AU - Lai, Shicong

AU - Seery, Samuel

AU - Wang, Ling

AU - Li, Xiaodan

AU - Liu, Huixin

AU - Qin, Caipeng

AU - Li, Wei

AU - Lu, Xiangyun

AU - Liu, Chunxia

AU - Wang, Jia

AU - Xu, Tao

PY - 2023/2/28

Y1 - 2023/2/28

N2 - AIM: To explore factors associated with decision regret after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients.METHODS: This cross-sectional study involved 112 patients, who had received radical bladder cancer resection. Participants were recruited from August 2021 until January 2022. The decision regret scale (DRS), decision conflict scale (DCS), and the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Bladder cancer (FACT-BL) form were used to measure decision regret, decision conflict, and quality of life. Investigator-designed items further explored perceptions involved in decision-making participation and outcomes.RESULTS: The average score for decision regret was 26.21 (SD 15.886), while decision conflict was 20.27 (SD 13.375) and quality of life was 94.74 (SD 20.873). 57.1% of our participants had a little knowledge about the quality of life of patients who chose an alternate urinary diversion method; however, only 13.4% reported having a clear understanding. In addition, 8.9%, 26.8%, and 36.6% thought that quality of life related to alternate decisions was poor, average, or good, respectively. Multiple regression analysis suggested that decision regret is associated with decision conflict, quality of life, and the perceptions that others (who took alternate urinary diversion decisions) had a better quality of life.CONCLUSION: Decision regret is common among Chinese bladder cancer patients, after cystectomy. The prevalence of regret appears to be much higher in Chinese bladder cancer patients compared to similar studies from other regions. Decisions in mainland China are often made by the treating physician or by family members which may cause more profound regret. However, education and economic status are positively related to higher levels of regret which creates questions around knowing, participation, and expectations, which must be explored.

AB - AIM: To explore factors associated with decision regret after cystectomy among Chinese bladder cancer patients.METHODS: This cross-sectional study involved 112 patients, who had received radical bladder cancer resection. Participants were recruited from August 2021 until January 2022. The decision regret scale (DRS), decision conflict scale (DCS), and the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Bladder cancer (FACT-BL) form were used to measure decision regret, decision conflict, and quality of life. Investigator-designed items further explored perceptions involved in decision-making participation and outcomes.RESULTS: The average score for decision regret was 26.21 (SD 15.886), while decision conflict was 20.27 (SD 13.375) and quality of life was 94.74 (SD 20.873). 57.1% of our participants had a little knowledge about the quality of life of patients who chose an alternate urinary diversion method; however, only 13.4% reported having a clear understanding. In addition, 8.9%, 26.8%, and 36.6% thought that quality of life related to alternate decisions was poor, average, or good, respectively. Multiple regression analysis suggested that decision regret is associated with decision conflict, quality of life, and the perceptions that others (who took alternate urinary diversion decisions) had a better quality of life.CONCLUSION: Decision regret is common among Chinese bladder cancer patients, after cystectomy. The prevalence of regret appears to be much higher in Chinese bladder cancer patients compared to similar studies from other regions. Decisions in mainland China are often made by the treating physician or by family members which may cause more profound regret. However, education and economic status are positively related to higher levels of regret which creates questions around knowing, participation, and expectations, which must be explored.

KW - RESEARCH ARTICLE

KW - RESEARCH ARTICLES

KW - China

KW - conflict

KW - decision making

KW - perception

KW - quality of life

KW - urinary bladder neoplasia

U2 - 10.1002/cam4.5281

DO - 10.1002/cam4.5281

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36271485

VL - 12

SP - 4786

EP - 4793

JO - Cancer Medicine

JF - Cancer Medicine

SN - 2045-7634

IS - 4

ER -