AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to compare patient satisfaction and anxiety levels among women undergoing core-needle breast biopsies on the same day vs. a later date, analyzing responses from 974 participants over a 16-month period.
  • Findings showed that same-day biopsies led to significantly higher satisfaction with the overall breast-care experience and wait times, but also resulted in greater anxiety both before and after the procedure.
  • The analysis indicated that effective communication with radiologists reduced prebiopsy anxiety, while certain demographic differences, particularly among Black women, revealed patterns of lower prebiopsy satisfaction and varying postbiopsy anxiety levels.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine differences in patient satisfaction and anxiety among women undergoing core-needle breast biopsies performed the same day as recommended versus a future date.

Methods: After institutional review board exemption was granted, a survey was administered to patients at four sites on the day of imaging-guided core-needle breast biopsy. The survey was available from November 2020 through January 2022. Questions pertained to biopsy timing (same day versus later day), pre- and postbiopsy satisfaction with overall breast-care experience, biopsy wait-time satisfaction, pre- and postbiopsy anxiety, radiologist-patient communication, demographics, life stressors, breast cancer history, and risk factors. Comparisons were made between same-day and later-day biopsies by multivariable analysis.

Results: Of 974 respondents (response rate 65.6%), almost half were scheduled for same-day biopsies (47.8% [466 of 974]). In multivariate analyses, same-day biopsies were associated with higher prebiopsy overall breast-care satisfaction (P < .001), higher wait-time satisfaction (P < .001), and higher prebiopsy (P = .001) and postbiopsy anxiety (P = .001). Better radiologist-patient communication was associated with lower prebiopsy anxiety (P < .001) and greater prebiopsy overall (P < .001) and wait-time (P < .001) satisfaction. Compared with White women, Black women reported lower postbiopsy anxiety (P < .001) but also lower prebiopsy satisfaction (P = .03) and wait-time satisfaction (P < .001).

Conclusions: Same-day versus later-day biopsies resulted in better prebiopsy overall breast-care and wait-time patient satisfaction scores; however, no satisfaction differences were noted after biopsy. Clinically significant anxiety was associated with both same- and later-day biopsies but was higher for same-day biopsies. Higher anxiety levels correlated with lower overall satisfaction, suggesting that interventions to reduce anxiety and improve communication could improve patient experiences during same-day biopsies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jacr.2023.07.028DOI Listing

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