4.3 Article

Intensive end-of-life care in acute leukemia from a French national hospital database study (2017-2018)

Journal

BMC PALLIATIVE CARE
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12904-022-00937-0

Keywords

Acute leukemia; End-of-life care; Palliative care; Registry database; Health services research

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This study investigates the management of end-of-life care for acute leukemia patients who died in the hospital. The findings show that a majority of patients received high-intensity end-of-life care. Younger age, comorbidities, care managed in specialized hospitals, and shorter time in palliative care structures were associated with higher intensity of end-of-life care.
Background: A better understanding of how the care of acute leukemia patients is managed in the last days of life would help clinicians and health policy makers improve the quality of end-of-life care. This study aimed: (i) to describe the intensity of end-of-life care among patients with acute leukemia who died in the hospital (2017-2018) and (ii) to identify the factors associated with the intensity of end-of-life care. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of decedents based on data from the French national hospital database. The population included patients with acute leukemia who died during a hospital stay between 2017 and 2018, in a palliative care situation (code palliative care Z515 and-or being in a inpatient palliative care support bed during the 3 months preceding death). Intensity end-of-life care was assessed using two endpoints: High intensive end-of-life (HI-EOL: intensive care unit admission, emergency department admission, acute care hospitalization, intravenous chemotherapy) care and most invasive end-of-life (MI-EOL: orotracheal intubation, mechanical ventilation, artificial feeding, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, gastrostomy, or hemodialysis) care. Results: A total of 3658 patients were included. In the last 30 days of life, 63 and 13% of the patients received HI-EOL care and MI-EOL care, respectively. Being younger, having comorbidities, being care managed in a specialized hospital, and a lower time in a palliative care structure were the main factors associated with HI-EOL. Conclusions: A large majority of French young adults and adults with acute leukemia who died at the hospital experienced high intensity end-of-life care. Identification of factors associated with high-intensity end-of-life care, such as the access to palliative care and specialized cancer center care management, may help to improve end-of-life care quality.

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