Hazel – Interview 05
Hazel learnt she had breast cancer (DCIS) after screening in 1991. After surgery she was asked to be in a trial comparing no further treatment with radiotherapy, tamoxifen, or radiotherapy and tamoxifen combined. She declined to take part. (You can see Hazel talking more about her experiences on the Healthtalkonline site on Breast cancer screening, Interview 17 & DCIS, Interview 26).
Hazel went for breast screening in 1991 and discovered she had a non-invasive form of breast cancer – DCIS (ductal carcinoma in situ). After surgery, she was invited to take part in a trial for the management of screen-detected DCIS comparing no further treatment with radiotherapy on its own, tamoxifen on its own, or radiotherapy and tamoxifen combined. DCIS was poorly understood, so there was great uncertainty about how it should best be treated and what the future risks were for women with the condition. Although her health care team explained everything to her very fully, Hazel felt there was insufficient information to be able to make a proper decision. She therefore felt she could not agree to be randomised. She was also concerned that the trial was concerned with the effect of the treatments on recurrence rather than on overall survival, which is usually the main concern of anyone just diagnosed with cancer.
She decided to take tamoxifen, but stopped taking it after about 17 months because of the side effects she was experiencing. At the time, she did not realise some doctors who were entering their patients for the trial had doubts about using radiotherapy for DCIS and were able to choose to have their patients randomised only to the arm of the trial comparing tamoxifen with no further treatment.
Hazel felt strongly enough about her experience to write about it to every member of the committee organising the trial. She also had an article about it published in The Lancet medical journal. Her ideas generated a lot of professional interest and in 1994 she co-founded (with cancer surgeon Professor Michael Baum) the Consumers; Advisory Group for Clinical Trials (CAG-CT). Since then, she has become very actively involved as an advocate for patient and public involvement and quality in health care research, and has co-authored a book on the subject. She feels it is very important that people should seriously consider taking part in trials, so that medical knowledge can be advanced, but trials must be well-designed and address questions that are important to patients, not just to doctors and scientists. She feels there is a need for greater public understanding of what trials are. At the same time, she believes that each individual has to make the decision that is right for them personally and seek as much information as they need. Sometimes, family pressures for the person to pursue every possible treatment avenue can make decision-making very difficult.
(You can see Hazel talking more about her experiences on the Healthtalkonline site on Breast cancer screening, Interview 17and DCIS, Interview 26).