Exploring the Experiences of Individuals Diagnosed with Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants and Recruitment
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Current Healthcare Experiences
“I think the main one, we talked about it almost as a thread through the whole works here, was the lack of oncology doctors to have enough time. And I’m not going to criticize any of them because they’re all wonderful across our nation and across the world. But having enough time to really sit down and talk to us in more of…not just medical all the time, but just like, How are you doing emotionally?”[P7]
3.2. On-Going Challenges
3.2.1. Physical Challenges
“Initially I couldn’t work because of physical pain that I had. And then I couldn’t work because of the fatigue and my mental capacity just wasn’t there as… I was working as a [career], which is very fast paced. And it just… My head wasn’t in the game anymore.”[P2]
3.2.2. Emotional Challenges
“I think the things that are concerning to me are the ones we already talked about earlier. And it’s particularly this access to second line medication and ulterior lines of medication. Because until 2021, I think it was, alectinib was accessible in Canada. But it was accessible because it was the pharmaceutical company paying for it. And, yeah, obviously they got fed up of paying for everything themselves, and the government didn’t kick in. So that wound down. And so today, everyone is an orphan. And I know some people who buy it privately. And the cost… I know one guy, he buys it, and the pharmaceutical company pays half, and he pays half. But it’s nevertheless almost $4000 a month. But not everybody has those means.”[P4]
“But, you know, if you want to know the thing that worries me, is what happens… I can’t imagine the… I don’t know if agony is the right word. But just like… So, if the Lorlatinib stopped working for me, and there’s something else out there that’s working for people, but I can’t get it, right. I just can’t imagine that.”[P3]
I really do think there was a stigma there that, you know, why should we put money in there, they’re causing their own problems? Well, I never smoked, you know. So… No radon. We did check our house for radon. So, it’s not that. So, who knows? I don’t know.[P6]
“Like people see cancer as binary. You either die or you’re cured. They don’t understand that a large percentage of us are sort of in that in between, right? Like even when people are cured, now we’re finding that there’s always, you know, a lot of recurrence. Like it’s not always cured, cured. Like it comes back. So how to talk to people, and manage their expectations when it comes to like, I have cancer. “[Gasp]. Are you going to die? Can I talk to you? Can I come visit you? It’s like, No, I’m not…”[P1]
“I was told that I can’t volunteer for so many hours per week because then it might look like I’m well enough to go back to work. But honestly, I have a job that was so stressful and required so much of my brain time. That just because I volunteer 15 h at a food bank, doesn’t mean I can do 15 h of my job anymore. Like it’s just not the same. Like doing a repetitive task at a volunteer job is not the same as like… So, like how to find meaning in your life? So, what’s next? How do you find meaning in your life if you’re not well enough to go back to work?”[P1]
3.2.3. Practical Challenges
“My private insurance lasts for another seven years. So, if I’m lucky enough to live another seven years, which I hope I am, what are we going to do then? Because, you know, we have some savings, but we needed to tap into that for our kids’ education and stuff. Because, you know, that extra money that I had hoped to be making that I referred to earlier, like that would have been used to help do that. So, we’ve had to tap into savings to do some of those things. And so… And we’re not in a situation where we can add to our savings. So, what am I going to… What are we going to do when I’m 65 and that pension runs out? I’ll probably have to go back to work.”[P3]
“And there’s the financial impact of being in the situation. You know, from one end of the spectrum to the other on this. We had advisors telling us like, well, listen, you know, you get a disability, you know, you probably, you’re either going to go on disability or die. So, you try to deal with both possibilities. But, you know, what about needing to go on disability but not dying and living longer, and just how to live? Having to figure that out financially which is a little bit of a challenge.”[P3]
3.3. Facilitators and Barriers to Challenges Being Addressed
3.3.1. Facilitators to Challenges Being Addressed
“You know what, my palliative care doctor is probably the best resource there is. Like she’s amazing. So if I just send them a note, they’ll probably be able to help me out with referrals and stuff like that, and trying to find the things that I need.”[P1]
“I was stable. So, then I received all of my care in that manner from my family doctor. Who of course had never heard of my particular kind of cancer or the drug that I was on. But between the two of us, we devised a pretty good system of how I would move forward with my day-by-day ailments that were caused from the drug.”[P2]
“My family is very supportive, and they were very helpful. You know, they brought food up. And I had more soup than I could deal with, you know. So, my husband could just focus on everything that he had to do with me. So, they’re very helpful”[P6]
3.3.2. Barriers to Challenges Being Addressed
“Well, in the beginning, I had physical symptoms from the cancer. And then after I started treatment, things were healing and I didn’t have the physical symptoms. But then I had a lot of side effects from the drugs. And my oncology team did not address any of it. Because my perception is they only cared about what was going on with the scans and how the body was looking, you know”.[P2]
“You know, once you can go past, you know, one year on the calendar, I think there’s a psychological benefit to that. And, yeah, I would have liked somebody to help me at that time. But as it turned out, there was nobody. So, you know, I just quietly muddled through that, and perhaps came out stronger at the end, I don’t know.”[P4]
“So [social worker] mentioned the [University] has a program for people that once they complete their treatment, to help get them back up… To get back into normal activity, is the idea behind it. But again, I think it’s because it’s for people that are done treatment and on the other side of things. So, I don’t think that I quite qualify for that yet because I’ll be in ongoing treatment.”[P8]
3.4. Proposed Healthcare Supports and Intervention Development
3.4.1. Healthcare- and Policy-Directed Changes
“Well, that’s my fantasy world—that I would like to see different practitioners working together, non-traditional as well as the traditional. That there was some way to bring them together in a collaborative setting. Because to me, they complement each other. And I think that, you know, I would have appreciated not having to kind of tiptoe around some people and make sure I asked nicely. You know, that it should just be automatic. Like these people have been here forever—osteopaths, massage therapists. And like I was told I couldn’t do it. And honestly, the treatments are so gentle that I could have been doing it all along.”[P6]
3.4.2. Access and Information
“I think it’s called a nurse navigator or something. Apparently in the States they have them where somebody is with you and can kind of guide you through all of these things. Say, you should see this, you should go here. That might be helpful. And it maybe doesn’t even have to be a nurse. But if there’s somebody that knows all of the things, can check all the boxes, then, you know, you’re covering all your bases”.[P6]
“I would love to have some kind of one-stop shop. Like, you know, start here, and then if you want more information, like here’s all the different things you could look for, and then you could like branch out there. But it would be great to kind of have one place where it’s like you start here now. Versus like us trying to find, you know, different things in different places”.[P1]
“Well, I mean day one when I was diagnosed, I feel I should have been given at least a pamphlet describing what this cancer was, how it worked, and a direction on how to get a support group if… I know not everybody’s interested in a support group, but we need to be made aware of what the options are. A therapist immediately to discuss with the family, or not, I feel is critical. Eventually it would become exercise programs and things like that”.[P2]
3.4.3. Overall Wellness and Maintaining Function
“Yeah, because physical health is one thing that… Because I don’t… I’m really trying to maintain and not decline. It’s not even a goal of improving at this point, right? Like I just want to like not decline. So, I certainly want to incorporate physical activity. And I have been in… we have some equipment in the basement. But I don’t know how much to push myself. So, yeah, so it would be nice to have a resource. Like somebody that would work with people in treatment. Because, like you said, I’m going to have to learn to live with, right, and develop my new normal with living with cancer, kind of thing.”[P8]
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
ALK+ | Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase |
HCP | Healthcare Provider |
mNSCLC | Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer |
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Demographic | n (%) |
---|---|
Age (Years) | |
Mean (range) | 59.5 (40–77) |
Years since diagnosis | |
Mean (range) | 4 (1–11) |
Gender | |
Male | 3 (37.5) |
Female | 5 (62.5) |
Residence type | |
Rural | 2 (25.0) |
Urban/Suburban | 6 (75.0) |
Education level | |
College or Bachelor’s degree | 4 (50.0) |
Master’s degree or Doctorate | 4 (50.0) |
Distance from cancer specialist | |
<30 min | 1 (12.5) |
30 min–1 h | 5 (62.5) |
>1 h | 2 (25.0) |
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Scruton, S.; Hovey, C.; Kendell, C.; Urquhart, R. Exploring the Experiences of Individuals Diagnosed with Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: A Qualitative Study. Curr. Oncol. 2025, 32, 570. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32100570
Scruton S, Hovey C, Kendell C, Urquhart R. Exploring the Experiences of Individuals Diagnosed with Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: A Qualitative Study. Current Oncology. 2025; 32(10):570. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32100570
Chicago/Turabian StyleScruton, Sarah, Caroline Hovey, Cynthia Kendell, and Robin Urquhart. 2025. "Exploring the Experiences of Individuals Diagnosed with Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: A Qualitative Study" Current Oncology 32, no. 10: 570. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32100570
APA StyleScruton, S., Hovey, C., Kendell, C., & Urquhart, R. (2025). Exploring the Experiences of Individuals Diagnosed with Metastatic Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: A Qualitative Study. Current Oncology, 32(10), 570. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol32100570