Disclosing a pancreatic cancer diagnosis in an era of immediate electronic result release: a national survey of endosonographers.
설문조사
1/5 보강
[BACKGROUND AND AIMS] There are limited data in how U.S.-based endosonographers disclose pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) diagnoses to patients.
APA
Tanner S, Abraham F, et al. (2025). Disclosing a pancreatic cancer diagnosis in an era of immediate electronic result release: a national survey of endosonographers.. Gastrointestinal endoscopy. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gie.2025.11.028
MLA
Tanner S, et al.. "Disclosing a pancreatic cancer diagnosis in an era of immediate electronic result release: a national survey of endosonographers.." Gastrointestinal endoscopy, 2025.
PMID
41274357 ↗
Abstract 한글 요약
[BACKGROUND AND AIMS] There are limited data in how U.S.-based endosonographers disclose pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) diagnoses to patients. Therefore, we conducted a survey study across endosonographers to assess practice patterns, evaluate knowledge gaps and challenges, and explore perceptions of federal regulations that mandate immediate release of test results through electronic portals.
[METHODS] A 29-item electronic survey was distributed to 684 U.S.-based endosonographers between October and November 2024.
[RESULTS] One hundred sixteen endosonographers participated (17% response rate). Endosonographers often deliver PDAC diagnoses via phone calls (75%), of 6 to 10 minutes (60%), and without following published protocols (81%). One-third of endosonographers believe more training is needed to deliver bad news. Most work in practices where results are immediately released (60%), which creates clinician dissatisfaction (65%) and frustration (57%).
[CONCLUSIONS] Endosonographers face communication and training challenges when delivering PDAC diagnoses. Strategies are needed to support endosonographers and minimize the negative impact of immediate test result release.
[METHODS] A 29-item electronic survey was distributed to 684 U.S.-based endosonographers between October and November 2024.
[RESULTS] One hundred sixteen endosonographers participated (17% response rate). Endosonographers often deliver PDAC diagnoses via phone calls (75%), of 6 to 10 minutes (60%), and without following published protocols (81%). One-third of endosonographers believe more training is needed to deliver bad news. Most work in practices where results are immediately released (60%), which creates clinician dissatisfaction (65%) and frustration (57%).
[CONCLUSIONS] Endosonographers face communication and training challenges when delivering PDAC diagnoses. Strategies are needed to support endosonographers and minimize the negative impact of immediate test result release.