2021
Patterns of treatment with everolimus exemestane in hormone receptor-positive HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer in the era of targeted therapy
Rozenblit M, Mun S, Soulos P, Adelson K, Pusztai L, Mougalian S. Patterns of treatment with everolimus exemestane in hormone receptor-positive HER2-negative metastatic breast cancer in the era of targeted therapy. Breast Cancer Research 2021, 23: 14. PMID: 33514405, PMCID: PMC7844919, DOI: 10.1186/s13058-021-01394-y.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPrior endocrine therapyEndocrine therapyMetastatic breast cancerEffective treatment optionTreatment optionsBreast cancerMedian treatmentMedian OSEE therapyHormone receptor-positive HER2-negative metastatic breast cancerMultivariable Cox proportional hazards regression analysisHER2-negative metastatic breast cancerPrior treatmentCox proportional hazards regression analysisFirst-line therapy initiationProportional hazards regression analysisPrior treatment optionsLines of therapyProportion of patientsKaplan-Meier methodHazards regression analysisPatterns of treatmentElectronic health record-derived dataClinical trial dataOS benefit
2020
Patient and Family Caregiver Considerations When Selecting Early Breast Cancer Treatment: Implications for Clinical Pathway Development
Schulman-Green D, Cherlin E, Capasso R, Mougalian SS, Wang S, Gross CP, Bajaj PS, Eakle K, Patel S, Douglas K, Adelson K. Patient and Family Caregiver Considerations When Selecting Early Breast Cancer Treatment: Implications for Clinical Pathway Development. The Patient - Patient-Centered Outcomes Research 2020, 13: 683-697. PMID: 32508006, DOI: 10.1007/s40271-020-00426-7.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsFamily caregiversTreatment optionsDecision regretHealth care system issuesEarly breast cancer treatmentCaregiver considerationsCancer treatment patternsInitial definitive treatmentClinical pathway developmentBreast cancer treatmentFamily caregivers' perspectivesConsideration of patientsDecision pathwaysFindings patientsDefinitive treatmentTreatment patternsSpouse/partnerBreast cancerClinical pathwayTreatment decisionsCancer statusPatientsStage ICaregiver perspectivesTreatment planNSCLC: Integrating the “Yale model shared decision-making solution” into the practice setting.
Adelson K, Herbst R, Peterson P, Ingram M, Oliver B, Agrawal T, Davies M, Rudell E. NSCLC: Integrating the “Yale model shared decision-making solution” into the practice setting. Journal Of Clinical Oncology 2020, 38: 7054-7054. DOI: 10.1200/jco.2020.38.15_suppl.7054.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCheckpoint inhibitor therapyReasonable treatment optionMore side effectsLung cancer patientsCancer care settingsPatient-centered careTreatment decision processNational Quality ForumInhibitor therapyPatient-centric careCancer patientsTreatment optionsTreatment choicePost-intervention interviewsPatientsSide effectsPractice settingsQuality ForumSDM skillsHealthcare decisionsCareSDM processGreater improvementCliniciansTeam members