Publications by authors named "A Bredart"

Purpose: This study aims to identify a combination of clinical, demographic, and patient competence determinants of patients' communication with doctors and nurses in an international sample of cancer patients.

Methods: For our cross-sectional study, cancer patients assessed their communication with their doctors or nurses at the start of their treatment. Patients completed EORTC communication questionnaire QLQ-COMU26 to assess ten areas of communication with their doctor or nurses plus another item to assess how competent they felt when communicating with professionals.

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Background: Quality of life (QoL) in patients undergoing surveillance for uveal melanoma (UM) can be affected by psychological sequelae. Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) may be acute especially when prognostication indicates an increased risk of metastatic recurrence. Communication with an ophthalmologist or oncologist can then play a key role in impacting QoL.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The EORTC QLQ-COMU26 is a newly developed questionnaire aimed at assessing how cancer patients perceive their communication with healthcare professionals, tested for validity and reliability among a diverse international sample.
  • - In a study with 498 cancer patients across 10 European countries, Japan, Jordan, and India, the questionnaire demonstrated clarity and minimal emotional distress, with strong reliability and appropriate scale structure confirmed through various assessments.
  • - The QLQ-COMU26 effectively identified differences in patient experiences based on factors like sex, education, and satisfaction with communication, as well as captured changes over time related to patient interactions with healthcare providers.
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Background: Patients' expectations regarding medical information in advanced stages of cancer are still poorly understood. Tailoring information to advanced cancer patients is a subtle task. We developed a question prompt list (QPL) that serves as a patient-oncologist communication aid in France.

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For a second ipsilateral breast tumor event, salvage mastectomy is the standard of care while second conservative treatment is a possible option. However, level 1 proofs are missing, leading to perform salvage mastectomy for patients who could receive second conservative treatment and consequently avoid psychological/quality of life salvage mastectomy deleterious impacts. A phase 3 randomized trial comparing salvage mastectomy to second conservative treatment is needed.

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