Feasibility and Acceptability of Symptom Management Research in Black Advanced Lung Cancer Patients.
1/5 보강
PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 2/4)
유사 논문P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
환자: advanced lung cancer; and 2) elicit participants' suggestions for improving study procedures
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
추출되지 않음
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
Opportunities to improve were also identified. Findings can inform best practices in conducting inclusive palliative care and communication research.
[CONTEXT] Patients from historically marginalized racial and ethnic groups are often underrepresented in symptom management research, but little is known about how to improve inclusivity and reach of
APA
Conley CC, Mossman B, et al. (2026). Feasibility and Acceptability of Symptom Management Research in Black Advanced Lung Cancer Patients.. Journal of pain and symptom management, 71(3), e220-e230. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2025.08.026
MLA
Conley CC, et al.. "Feasibility and Acceptability of Symptom Management Research in Black Advanced Lung Cancer Patients.." Journal of pain and symptom management, vol. 71, no. 3, 2026, pp. e220-e230.
PMID
41690713
Abstract
[CONTEXT] Patients from historically marginalized racial and ethnic groups are often underrepresented in symptom management research, but little is known about how to improve inclusivity and reach of these studies.
[OBJECTIVES] This mixed-methods study aimed to: 1) establish the feasibility and acceptability of study procedures for assessing symptoms and shared decision-making (SDM) among Black patients with advanced lung cancer; and 2) elicit participants' suggestions for improving study procedures.
[METHODS] Black patients with advanced lung cancer were recruited from three thoracic oncology clinics. Participants completed a baseline survey (T0), optional audio-recording of a routine oncology outpatient appointment, follow-up surveys one week (T1) and one month (T2) postappointment, and a semistructured exit interview examining experiences in the study and suggestions for improving future research. At each timepoint, participants completed the Treatment Acceptability and Preferences Questionnaire (TAPQ).
[RESULTS] We approached 69 potentially eligible patients, 40 (58%) completed the eligibility screener, 35 (88%) were eligible, 30 (86%) consented, and 27 (90%) were retained through T2, exceeding our a priori thresholds of ≥70% enrollment and retention through T2. Participants rated study procedures as acceptable (TAPQ scores ≥3) in 88% of observations, exceeding our a priori threshold of ≥70%. Qualitative analysis identified three categories of themes: participants' motivation for participating, their overall experiences in the study, and recommendations for future research.
[CONCLUSION] Research practices common in communication, palliative, and SDM studies were acceptable to most participants. Opportunities to improve were also identified. Findings can inform best practices in conducting inclusive palliative care and communication research.
[OBJECTIVES] This mixed-methods study aimed to: 1) establish the feasibility and acceptability of study procedures for assessing symptoms and shared decision-making (SDM) among Black patients with advanced lung cancer; and 2) elicit participants' suggestions for improving study procedures.
[METHODS] Black patients with advanced lung cancer were recruited from three thoracic oncology clinics. Participants completed a baseline survey (T0), optional audio-recording of a routine oncology outpatient appointment, follow-up surveys one week (T1) and one month (T2) postappointment, and a semistructured exit interview examining experiences in the study and suggestions for improving future research. At each timepoint, participants completed the Treatment Acceptability and Preferences Questionnaire (TAPQ).
[RESULTS] We approached 69 potentially eligible patients, 40 (58%) completed the eligibility screener, 35 (88%) were eligible, 30 (86%) consented, and 27 (90%) were retained through T2, exceeding our a priori thresholds of ≥70% enrollment and retention through T2. Participants rated study procedures as acceptable (TAPQ scores ≥3) in 88% of observations, exceeding our a priori threshold of ≥70%. Qualitative analysis identified three categories of themes: participants' motivation for participating, their overall experiences in the study, and recommendations for future research.
[CONCLUSION] Research practices common in communication, palliative, and SDM studies were acceptable to most participants. Opportunities to improve were also identified. Findings can inform best practices in conducting inclusive palliative care and communication research.
MeSH Terms
Humans; Lung Neoplasms; Male; Female; Feasibility Studies; Middle Aged; Black or African American; Aged; Patient Acceptance of Health Care; Surveys and Questionnaires; Decision Making, Shared; Adult; White