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How do you explain progression free survival to patients?

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Medical Oncology · Stanford University School of Medicine

This is a really, really important question.

I'd argue we often greatly undervalue the importance of communication with our patients and the impact the quality of our communication has on what they understand about their illness.

I remember once having a long conversation with a patient where I outl...

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Medical Oncology · Texas Oncology

I think we do patients a disservice a lot of the time by using PFS and equating that with OS or even with clinical benefit. PFS can simply mean that a target lesion on an imaging study has not increased by more than 20%, and that does not necessarily correlate with any benefit at all.

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Radiation Oncology · Premiere Radiation Oncology

I first like to talk about treatable versus curable. This is similar to/the same as palliative versus curable. However, assessing a person's understanding of the disease is helpful before starting the conversation. This often takes 5-10 minutes but allows for some very important questions -- often t...

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Radiation Oncology · Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center

From a Radiation Oncology perspective in the curative setting, I frequently use the terms remission even when talking about solid tumors, saying that if you've been in remission for 5 to 10 years (disease site specific) you achieve a cure.

I cannot remember a situation where a patient has explicitly...

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Medical Oncology · University of Alabama Birmingham

Statistical calculations are almost always confusing and at times could be biased due to the sample size/characteristics. Most of the data are based on western literature and has different populations. To generalize a different group of patients may not be accurate. I refer to "When breath becomes a...

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