Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Global Open (Mar 2014)

Assessing Women’s Preferences and Preference Modeling for Breast Reconstruction Decision Making

  • Clement S. Sun, MS,
  • Scott B. Cantor, PhD,
  • Gregory P. Reece, MD,
  • Melissa A. Crosby, MD,
  • Michelle C. Fingeret, PhD,
  • Mia K. Markey, PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/GOX.0000000000000062
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
p. e125

Abstract

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Background: Women considering breast reconstruction must make challenging trade-offs among issues that often conflict. It may be useful to quantify possible outcomes using a single summary measure to aid a breast cancer patient in choosing a form of breast reconstruction. Methods: In this study, we used multiattribute utility theory to combine multiple objectives to yield a summary value using 9 different preference models. We elicited the preferences of 36 women, aged 32 or older with no history of breast cancer, for the patient-reported outcome measures of breast satisfaction, psychosocial well-being, chest well-being, abdominal well-being, and sexual well-being as measured by the BREAST-Q in addition to time lost to reconstruction and out-of-pocket cost. Participants ranked hypothetical breast reconstruction outcomes. We examined each multiattribute utility preference model and assessed how often each model agreed with participants’ rankings. Results: The median amount of time required to assess preferences was 34 minutes. Agreement among the 9 preference models with the participants ranged from 75.9% to 78.9%. None of the preference models performed significantly worse than the best-performing risk-averse multiplicative model. We hypothesize an average theoretical agreement of 94.6% for this model if participant error is included. There was a statistically significant positive correlation with more unequal distribution of weight given to the 7 attributes. Conclusions: We recommend the risk-averse multiplicative model for modeling the preferences of patients considering different forms of breast reconstruction because it agreed most often with the participants in this study.