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Preoperative Decision-Making in Patients With Pulmonary Nodules Suspected of Lung Cancer
Sponsor: Sichuan Cancer Hospital and Research Institute
Summary
Patients with pulmonary nodules that are highly suspected to be lung cancer often need to make important treatment decisions before a definite pathological diagnosis is available. These decisions may include whether to undergo surgery, whether to continue follow-up, whether to have further diagnostic tests, and how to understand the potential benefits and risks of different management options. This prospective observational study aims to describe the preoperative decision-making status of adult patients with pulmonary nodules suspected of lung cancer. The study will assess patients' decision self-efficacy, decisional conflict, shared decision-making experience, and decision regret using standardized questionnaires. It will also explore factors associated with better or worse decision quality, such as demographic characteristics, clinical information, health literacy, doctor-patient communication, family involvement, and emotional status. No treatment or intervention will be assigned by the study. Participants will receive routine clinical care, and study data will be collected mainly through questionnaires before surgery or during the preoperative period. The findings may help clinicians identify patients who need additional decision support and improve communication during preoperative decision-making for suspected lung cancer.
Official title: Preoperative Decision-Making Characteristics and Associated Mechanisms in Patients With Pulmonary Nodules Suspected of Lung Cancer
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
200
Start Date
2026-05
Completion Date
2027-07-31
Last Updated
2026-05-18
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Questionnaire-Based Decision-Making Assessment
Participants will complete structured questionnaires during the preoperative outpatient or inpatient period. The questionnaires will assess decision self-efficacy, decisional conflict, shared decision-making experience, decision regret, and related demographic and clinical factors. The study will not assign any treatment, diagnostic procedure, surgery, or decision-support intervention. All clinical care and management decisions will follow routine practice.
Locations (1)
Sichuan Cancer Hospital and Institute, Sichuan Cancer Center, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China
Chengdu, Sichuan, China