4.6 Article

Associations of prognostic-awareness-transition patterns with end-of-life care in cancer patients' last month

Journal

SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER
Volume 30, Issue 7, Pages 5975-5989

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00520-022-07007-4

Keywords

Prognostic awareness; Transition patterns; End of life care; Neoplasms; Cancer

Funding

  1. National Health Research Institutes [NHRI-EX106-10208PI, NHRI-EX111-10704PI]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology [MOST 108-2314-B-182-061-MY3]
  3. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital [BMRP888]

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This study aimed to explore the associations between prognostic awareness transition patterns and end-of-life care in cancer patients. The study found that cancer patients who maintained accurate prognostic awareness or gained accurate prognostic awareness had significantly lower odds of cardiopulmonary resuscitation and higher odds of hospice care in the last month compared to those who maintained inaccurate/unknown prognostic awareness.
Purpose Cancer patients heterogeneously develop prognostic awareness, and end-of-life cancer care has become increasingly aggressive to the detriment of patients and healthcare sustainability. We aimed to explore the never-before-examined associations of prognostic-awareness-transition patterns with end-of-life care. Methods Prognostic awareness was categorized into four states: (1) unknown and not wanting to know; (2) unknown but wanting to know; (3) inaccurate awareness; and (4) accurate awareness. We examined associations of our previously identified three prognostic-awareness-transition patterns during 334 cancer patients' last 6 months (maintaining accurate prognostic awareness, gaining accurate prognostic awareness, and maintaining inaccurate/unknown prognostic awareness) and end-of-life care (cardiopulmonary resuscitation, intensive care unit care, mechanical ventilation, chemotherapy/immunotherapy, and hospice care) in cancer patients' last month by multivariate logistic regressions. Results Cancer patients in the maintaining-accurate-prognostic-awareness and gaining-accurate-prognostic-awareness groups had significantly lower odds of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (adjusted odds ratio [95% confidence interval]: 0.22 [0.06-0.78]; and 0.10 [0.01-0.97], respectively) but higher odds of hospice care (3.44 [1.64-7.24]; and 3.28 [1.32-8.13], respectively) in the last month than those in the maintaining inaccurate/unknown prognostic awareness. The maintaining-accurate-prognostic-awareness group had marginally lower odds of chemotherapy or immunotherapy received than the gaining-accurate-prognostic-awareness group (0.58 [0.31-1.10], p = .096]). No differences in intensive care unit care and mechanical ventilation among cancer patients in different prognostic-awareness-transition patterns were observed. Conclusion End-of-life care received in cancer patients' last month was associated with the three distinct prognostic-awareness-transition patterns. Cancer patients' accurate prognostic awareness should be facilitated earlier to reduce their risk of receiving aggressive end-of-life care, especially for avoiding chemotherapy/immunotherapy close to death.

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