Impact of Palliative Medicine Involvement on End-of-Life Services for Patients with Cancer with In-Hospital Deaths

Alison Wiesenthal, Debra A. Goldman, Deborah Korenstein

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose Palliative care (PC) has been shown to improve the quality of care and resource utilization for inpatients. We examined the relationship between PC consultation before and during final admission and patterns of care for dying patients at our tertiary cancer center. Methods We retrospectively reviewed adult patients with solid tumor cancer with a length of stay 3 dayswhodied in hospital between December 2012 and November 2014.Werecorded services, including laboratory testing, imaging, blood products, medications, diet orders, do not resuscitate orders, and consultations, delivered within 3 days of death. We assessed the differences among services delivered to patients with outpatient PC, inpatientPConly, and no PC involvement. Results Of 695 patients, 21% received outpatient PC, 46% received inpatient PC only, and 33% received no PC. During their final admission, 11.2% of patients received radiation therapy, and 12.5% received tumor-directed therapy, with no differences on the basis PC involvement (P = .09 to .17). In the last 3 days of life, imaging tests occurred in 50.1%; patients with outpatient or inpatient-only PC underwent fewer studies (43.5% and 47.3%) than did those with no PC involvement (58.1%; P = .048). Donot resuscitate orders were in place within the 6 months before final admission at a greater rate for patients with outpatient PC (22%) than for patients with inpatient-only PC (8%) or those with no PC involvement (12%; P = .002). Conclusion In this retrospective cohort of patients with solid tumor dying in hospital, few patients received cancer-directed therapies at the end of life. Involvement of PC was associated with a decrease in diagnostic testing and other services not clearly promoting comfort as patients approached death.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)e749-e759
JournalJournal of Oncology Practice
Volume13
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Sep 2017
Externally publishedYes

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Impact of Palliative Medicine Involvement on End-of-Life Services for Patients with Cancer with In-Hospital Deaths'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this