Predictive Factors Associated with Declining Psycho-Oncological Support in Patients with Cancer

Curr Oncol. 2023 Nov 4;30(11):9746-9759. doi: 10.3390/curroncol30110707.

Abstract

(1) Background: International cancer treatment guidelines recommend low-threshold psycho-oncological support based on nurses' routine distress screening (e.g., via the distress thermometer and problem list). This study aims to explore factors which are associated with declining psycho-oncological support in order to increase nurses' efficiency in screening patients for psycho-oncological support needs. (2) Methods: Using machine learning, routinely recorded clinical data from 4064 patients was analyzed for predictors of patients declining psycho-oncological support. Cross validation and nested resampling were used to guard against model overfitting. (3) Results: The developed model detects patients who decline psycho-oncological support with a sensitivity of 89% (area under the cure of 79%, accuracy of 68.5%). Overall, older patients, patients with a lower score on the distress thermometer, fewer comorbidities, few physical problems, and those who do not feel sad, afraid, or worried refused psycho-oncological support. (4) Conclusions: Thus, current screening procedures seem worthy to be part of daily nursing routines in oncology, but nurses may need more time and training to rule out misconceptions of patients on psycho-oncological support.

Keywords: distress in oncological patients; distress screening; machine learning; rejecting psycho-oncological support.

MeSH terms

  • Anxiety
  • Fear
  • Humans
  • Neoplasms* / therapy
  • Patients
  • Stress, Psychological* / diagnosis

Grants and funding

This research received no funding.