BMJ Open (Sep 2022)

Protocol of an iterative qualitative study to develop a molecular testing decision aid for shared decision-making in patients with lung cancer after surgery

  • Wei Xu,
  • Wei Dai,
  • Qiang Li,
  • Jing Sun,
  • Qiuling Shi,
  • Yuanqiang Zhang,
  • Wenhong Feng,
  • Yunfei Mu,
  • Xing Wei,
  • Yaqin Wang,
  • Ding Yang,
  • Qi Pan,
  • Yangjun Liu,
  • Hongfan Yu,
  • Kunpeng Zhang,
  • Ruoyan Gong,
  • Qingsong Yu,
  • Yang Pu,
  • Jia Liao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061367
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9

Abstract

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Introduction Although molecular testing is crucial for many patients with lung cancer, the decision to carry out molecular testing is not easy to make in actual clinical scenarios. Using a specific decision aid (DA) to conduct shared decision-making (SDM) may help ameliorate this problem. However, no DA currently exists for lung cancer molecular testing (DA_LCMT). We aim to develop an evidence-based, iteratively refined DA, which may facilitate SDM and improve the quality of SDM.Methods and analysis After considering the Ottawa Decision Support Framework, International Patient Decision Aid Standards and Food and Drug Administration guidance about methods to identify what is important to patients, semistructured interviews with qualitative research methods will be used to generate the decision-making needs of patients with lung cancer diagnosed with lung adenocarcinoma by intraoperative frozen pathological sections. Input will be provided by patients and other stakeholders, including thoracic surgeons, nurses, hospital administrators, molecular testing company staff and insurance company staff. Then, a modified Delphi method will be used to develop the DA_LCMT V.1.0 (DA_LCMT 1.0). Structured interviews with qualitative research methods will be used in the cognitive debriefing (alpha tests) and field testing (beta tests) to revise and improve the DA_LCMT from version 1.0 to the final version, version 3.0. Descriptive statistics will be used to summarise the baseline characteristics of the patients and other stakeholders. Qualitative data will be analysed using the three steps of grounded theory: generate a codebook, update the codebook and create a comprehensive list of related items.Ethics and dissemination Ethics Committee for Medical Research and New Medical Technology of Sichuan Cancer Hospital approved this study. This protocol is based on the latest version 1.0, dated 31 October 2021. The study was also approved by the Ethics Committees of The Third People’s Hospital of Chengdu, Zigong First People’s Hospital and Jiangyou People’s Hospital. The results of this study will be presented at medical conferences and published in peer-reviewed journals.Trial registration number NCT05191485.