4.6 Review

Palliative care interventions in intensive care unit patients

Journal

INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE
Volume 47, Issue 12, Pages 1415-1425

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00134-021-06544-6

Keywords

Critical care; Palliative care; End-of-life care

Funding

  1. ESICM Systematic Review Group (SRG)

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The study evaluated various types of palliative care interventions implemented in ICUs and their impact on practice, finding that strategies to enhance palliative care involvement were associated with beneficial effects on common outcomes for ICU patients. However, the majority of studies were from North America, limiting the generalisability to other healthcare systems.
Purpose The integration of palliative care into intensive care units (ICUs) is advocated to mitigate physical and psychological burdens for patients and their families, and to improve end-of-life care. The most efficacious palliative care interventions, the optimal model of their delivery and the most appropriate outcome measures in ICU are not clear. Methods We conducted a systematic review of randomised clinical trials and observational studies to evaluate the number and types of palliative care interventions implemented within the ICU setting, to assess their impact on ICU practice and to evaluate differences in palliative care approaches across different countries. Results Fifty-eight full articles were identified, including 9 randomised trials and 49 cohort studies; all but 4 were conducted within North America. Interventions were categorised into five themes: communication (14, 24.6%), ethics consultations (5, 8.8%), educational (18, 31.6%), involvement of a palliative care team (28, 49.1%) and advance care planning or goals-of-care discussions (7, 12.3%). Thirty studies (51.7%) proposed an integrative model, whilst 28 (48.3%) reported a consultative one. The most frequently reported outcomes were ICU or hospital length of stay (33/55, 60%), limitation of life-sustaining treatment decisions (22/55, 40%) and mortality (15/55, 27.2%). Quantitative assessment of pooled data was not performed due to heterogeneity in interventions and outcomes between studies. Conclusion Beneficial effects on the most common outcomes were associated with strategies to enhance palliative care involvement, either with an integrative or a consultative approach. Few studies reported functional outcomes for ICU patients. Almost all studies were from North America, limiting the generalisability to other healthcare systems.

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