Oncologists must discuss all options in advanced cancer: ASCO policy
Source: MedScape.com By: Zosia Chustecka January 28, 2011 — A new policy statement from the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) aims to improve communication with, and decision making for, patients with advanced cancer (defined as incurable disease). It calls for a change in paradigm for advanced cancer care and a new approach in which all available treatment options are discussed from the very beginning. The statement was published online on January 24 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology. "While improving survival is the oncologist's primary goal, helping individuals live their final days in comfort and dignity is one of the most important responsibilities of our profession," ASCO president George Sledge, MD, said in a statement. "Oncologists must lead the way in discussing the full range of curative and palliative therapies to ensure that patients' choices are honored," he said. New Paradigm of Care This new approach "requires stepping back from the paradigm of applying one line of therapy after the other and focusing primarily on disease-directed interventions," say the authors, comprised of a panel of oncologists and specialists in palliative care. "Instead, we need to move toward developing a treatment plan that is consistent with evidence-based options (including disease-directed and palliative care), and the patients' informed preferences for how we pursue and balance these options throughout the course of illness," they add. Conversations about all of the options that are available must be started earlier, and they must be more thorough, the panel insists. "These conversations should be going on [...]