| Literature DB >> 27059593 |
Judith A C Rietjens1, Ida J Korfage2, Lesley Dunleavy3, Nancy J Preston3, Lea J Jabbarian2, Caroline Arnfeldt Christensen4, Maja de Brito5, Francesco Bulli6, Glenys Caswell7, Branka Červ5, Johannes van Delden8, Luc Deliens9,10, Giuseppe Gorini6, Mogens Groenvold4,11, Dirk Houttekier9, Francesca Ingravallo12, Marijke C Kars8, Urška Lunder5, Guido Miccinesi6, Alenka Mimić5, Eugenio Paci6, Sheila Payne3, Suzanne Polinder2, Kristian Pollock7, Jane Seymour7, Anja Simonič5, Anna Thit Johnsen11,13, Mariëtte N Verkissen9, Esther de Vries2, Andrew Wilcock14, Marieke Zwakman8, Agnes van der Heide Pl2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Awareness of preferences regarding medical care should be a central component of the care of patients with advanced cancer. Open communication can facilitate this but can occur in an ad hoc or variable manner. Advance care planning (ACP) is a formalized process of communication between patients, relatives and professional caregivers about patients' values and care preferences. It raises awareness of the need to anticipate possible future deterioration of health. ACP has the potential to improve current and future healthcare decision-making, provide patients with a sense of control, and improve their quality of life. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Advance care planning; Medical decision-making; Oncology; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27059593 PMCID: PMC4826555 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2298-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Histologically confirmed diagnosis of: | Age < 18 years |
| - small cell - extensive disease/Stage III or IV* | Unable to provide consent |
| • Colorectal cancer: Stage IV or metachronous metastases* | Unable to complete questionnaire in country’s language |
| *according to 7th edition of TNM classification and staging system | Less than 3 months anticipated life expectancy |
| Written informed consent to participate | Taking part in a research study that is evaluating palliative care services or communication strategies. |
| WHO performance status of 0–3. |
Patient and bereaved carer endpoints of the project
| I. Measured by questionnaire | Measure |
|
| |
| - Quality of life | EORTC QLQ-C30 4-item emotional functioning scale [ |
| EORTC emotional functioning short-form based on CAT item bank | |
| - Symptoms | EORTC QLQ-C15-PAL [ |
|
| |
| - Shared decision-making | APECC [ |
| - Patient involvement | Self-constructed questions |
| - Satisfaction with care | EORTC IN–PATSAT32 [ |
| - Coping with illness | COPE [ |
| - Satisfaction with the intervention | Self-constructed questions |
| - Socio demographic measures | Self-constructed questions |
| - Quality of end-of-life care | VOICES-SF [ |
| - Bereaved carer wellbeing | HADS [ |
| II. Obtained from medical files | |
| - Survival; date and place of death (if applicable) | |
| - Completion and content of advance directives; preferences for care; assignment of proxy decision-maker; physician orders | |
| - Diagnostic procedures and treatments received by the patient, hospitalisations and specialist palliative care input. | |
| III. Obtained from intervention sessions and qualitative interviews | |
| Systematic cross-cultural comparison of patient experiences, responses and concerns. | |
aThese endpoints are measured by the bereaved carer questionnaire and not by the patient questionnaire