| Literature DB >> 27059989 |
Simon J W Oczkowski1, Han-Oh Chung2, Louise Hanvey3, Lawrence Mbuagbaw4,5, John J You2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For many patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU), preferences for end-of-life care are unknown, and clinicians and substitute decision-makers are required to make decisions about the goals of care on their behalf. We conducted a systematic review to determine the effect of structured communication tools for end-of-life decision-making, compared to usual care, upon the number of documented goals of care discussions, documented code status, and decisions to withdraw life-sustaining treatments, in adult patients admitted to the ICU.Entities:
Keywords: Communication; Critical care; End-of-life; Ethics; Palliative care
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27059989 PMCID: PMC4826553 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-016-1264-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Study eligibility criteria
| Eligibility criterion | Rationale |
|---|---|
| Randomized, controlled trial or prospective observational study, published in peer-reviewed journal | Randomized controlled trials and prospective observational study experimental designs are least likely to lead to biased results |
| Evaluates a structured communication tool (decision aid, structured meeting, educational strategy) compared to control group | • Interest in comparing wide variety of interventions, in multiple formats (verbal, paper, video, computer, etc.) |
| Communication tool must address end-of-life decision-making | Review interest is in interventions that assist patients with decision-making, as opposed to those that address breaking bad news, patient comfort alone |
| Adult patients (age >18 years) | End-of-life decision-making process in frail adults is likely to be qualitatively different from that in children |
| English language | Communication tools published in other languages, with no English translation available, may not be generalizable to english-language settings |
Fig. 1Flowsheet of study screening, eligibility, and inclusion
Study characteristics
| Study ID | Sample size | Population description | Country | Design | Target of intervention | Intervention | Comparator | Measured outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andereck 2014 [ | Intervention 174, control 210 | Patients admitted to the medical or surgical ICU of a tertiary care hospital for at least 5 consecutive days | USA | RCT | Family/SDM | The intervention group received a proactive ethics consultation. The ethics consultation assessed patient capacity and preferences, and assisted SDMs in medical decision-making, including DNR. The ethicist continued to follow the patient until discharge | Usual care | • Health care resource utilization |
| Lautrette 2007 [ | Intervention 63, control 63 | Adult patients admitted to medical or surgical ICUs judged to be likely to die within a few days, with an identified SDM | France | RCT | Family/SDM | An intensive end-of-life communication intervention aimed at eliciting the patient’s values, acknowledging the family member’s voice and emotions, and to allow questions. Following the meeting, families were given a brochure on bereavement | Usual care | • Quality of communication |
| Schneiderman 2000 [ | Intervention 35, control 35 | ICU patients in whom value-based treatment conflicts arose (e.g., disagreements over CPR status, withdrawal of life support, etc.) | USA | RCT | Family/SDM | Offering of an ethics consultation from the hospital ethics service | Usual care | • Health care resource utilization |
| Schneiderman 2003 [ | Intervention 278, control 273 | Critically ill adult patients admitted to medical or surgical ICUs | USA | RCT | Family/SDM | The intervention group received a proactive ethics consultation, which addressed current ethical issues, reviewed patient wishes and values, and provided recommendations for next steps regarding communication and decision-making | Usual | • Health care resource utilization |
| Ahrens 2003 [ | Intervention 43, control 108 | Patients admitted to an academic tertiary care medical ICU | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM | Families/SDMs were provided with an intensive communication strategy, including daily medical updates by the attending physician, provision of treatment options, including non-curative/palliative options, and support by a clinical nurse specialist | Usual care | • Health care resource utilization |
| Campbell 2003 [ | Intervention 20, control 18 | Patients admitted to the medical ICU with either global cerebral ischemia or multisystem organ failure, with a retrospective control cohort and prospective interventional cohort | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM | Early involvement of palliative care service in communicating prognosis to the family, identifying advance directives and preference, and assisting with discussion and implementation of treatment options and palliative care | Usual care | • Preference on life-sustaining treatment options |
| Cox 2012 [ | Intervention 10, control 17 | SDMs for adult medical and surgical ICU patients on mechanical ventilation for equal to or greater than 10 days, expected to survive for greater than 72 hours without pre-existing tracheostomy | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM | The prolonged mechanical ventilation decision aid reviewed medical information, elicited the SM understanding of the patient’s preferences, clarified the role of the SDM, and provided guidance in decision-making | Usual care | • Quality of communication |
| Daly 2010 [ | Intervention 354, control 135 | Incapable patients with 72 hours of mechanical ventilation, with an identified SDM, admitted to surgical, medical, or neuroscience ICUs at two university-affiliated medical centers | USA, Canada | Cohort | Family/SDM | An intensive communication system, including a family meeting with a medical update, identification of goals of care, a treatment plan, and milestones for determining if the treatment was effective, conducted within 5 days of ICU admission and weekly thereafter. | Usual care | • Preference on life-sustaining treatment options |
| Dowdy 1998 [ | Intervention 31, control 31 | Sequential patients treated with mechanical ventilation for more than 96 hours, between June 1992 and October 1994 | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM | Proactive ethics consultation, and daily as required, addressing advance directives, patient capacity, SDM knowledge of patient advance directive, anticipated conflicts, and limits of treatment | Usual care | • Preference on life-sustaining treatment options |
| Hatler 2012 [ | Intervention 98, control 105 | Patients admitted to a territory neurosurgical ICU who received mechanical ventilation for >96 hours, remained in ICU for 7 days or longer, and were not awaiting transfer out of ICU during that time | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM and HCPs | A surrogacy information and decision-making tool was filled out by the admitting nurse, documenting patient’s decision-making capacity, the identity of the SDM/POA, and prior advance directive. The nurse gave the patient or SDM an information sheet about surrogate decision-making and advance directives. | Usual care | • Health care resource utilization |
| Holloran 1995 [ | Intervention 6, control 24 | Patients admitted to a large, tertiary care ICU for any reason. | USA | Cohort | HCPs | “Decisions near the End of Life” program, a small-group workshop using cases to facilitate discussion of issues such as withholding or withdrawing treatment, eliciting patient and family wishes, patient competency, and conflict with families | Pre-intervention hospital cohort | • Health care resource utilization • Preference on life-sustaining treatment options |
| Knaus 1990 [ | Intervention 705, control 760 | All adult patients admitted to ICU, excluding those with uncomplicated myocardial infarction or those admitted with acute burns | France | Cohort | HCPs | HCPs were provided with a calculated estimate of hospital mortality daily on rounds until the patient died, or until 7 days, whichever came first | Usual care | • Preference on life-sustaining treatment options |
| Lamba 2012 [ | Intervention 104, control 79 | Patients admitted to a surgical ICU between March 2003 and May 2005 for liver transplantation | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM | Each patient had a palliative care assessment delineating prognosis, advance directives, family support, surrogate decision maker, and pain, within 24 hours of admission. The patient’s family received psychosocial and/or bereavement support. An interdisciplinary family meeting was held at 72 hours to address patient outcomes, treatment options, and goals of care, and family support was provided by a multidisciplinary team. | Usual care | • Quality of communication |
| Lilly 2000 [ | Intervention 396, control 134 | Consecutive admitted to the ICU of a tertiary care teaching hospital | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM | An intensive communication strategy, including a meeting with the attending physician within 72 hours for patients expected to stay >4 days, with predicted mortality >25 %, or change in functional status, unlikely to return to home | Usual care | • Advance directive discussions |
| McCannon 2012 [ | Intervention 27, control 23 | Patients admitted to the medical ICU age >50 years, currently incapable, likely to survive >24 hours, with an identified adult SDM. | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM | A 3-minute video decision support-tool was shown which reviewed CPR methods and outcomes, and the care of a sedated, mechanically ventilated patient, within 72 hours of ICU admission | Usual care | • Health care knowledge and literacy |
| Norton 2007 [ | Intervention 126, control 65 | Adult patients admitted to a medical ICU with a hospital stay of 10 days, age >80 years, or two or more life-threatening comorbidities | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM | The intervention group had a proactive palliative care consultation, which facilitated decision-making and family member support, and followed the patient until discharge | Usual | • Health care resource utilization |
| Quenot 2012 [ | Intervention 823, control 678 | All patients who died in the ICU, or in hospital after discharge to another department, during two periods, one before and one after a 2005 French law on end-of-life and patient rights. | France | Cohort | Family/SDM | An intensive communication strategy, including daily meetings with the attending team, modalities for withdrawing and withholding treatment, a special ‘ethics’ section in the chart, and debriefing sessions | Pre-intervention hospital cohort | • Preference on life-sustaining treatment options |
| Shelton 2010 [ | Intervention 114, control 113 | Patients admitted to the surgical ICU, anticipated by the attending physician to remain for at least 7 days, or were expected to die within that time, during two periods | USA | Cohort | Family/SDM | During the intervention period, a family support coordinator assessed the family’s information needs, interpreted and explained relevant medical information, assisted the family in decision-making, and identified the need for referrals to spiritual care and to enhance the health care team’s understanding of the family’s needs. | Usual care | • Satisfaction with end-of-life care |
| Curtis 2011 [ | Intervention 514, control 565 | Medical and surgical ICUs with sufficient ICU deaths to meet study sample size requirements (6 intervention hospitals, 6 control hospitals) Patients included those who died in ICU or within 30 hours of transfer to another hospital location. | USA | Cluster RCT | HCPs | A multifaceted intervention including education about palliative care, identification and training of ICU clinician local champions for palliative care, nurse and physician ICU directors to address barriers to improving end-of-life care, feedback of quality data including family satisfaction, and implementation of system supports such as palliative care order forms. | Usual care | • Satisfaction with end-of-life care |
RCT randomized controlled trial, SDM substitute decision-maker, CRP cardiopulmonary resuscitation, HCP health care provider
Risk of bias assessment for randomized controlled trials
aIn a cluster randomized trial, there are other domains to consider for risk of bias, including (1) recruitment bias; (2) baseline imbalance; (3) loss of clusters; (4) incorrect analysis; and (5) comparability. We judged Curtis 2011 [22] to be at high risk due to loss of clusters, incorrect analysis (due to lack of adjustment for clustering effects), and non-comparability between hospitals. Green = low risk of bias, Yellow = unclear risk of bias, Red = high risk of bias
Risk of bias/quality assessment for observational studies
| Study ID | Newcastle-Ottawa scale for cohort studies - selection | Newcastle-Ottawa scale for cohort studies - comparability | Newcastle-Ottawa scale for cohort studies - outcome | Overall Newcastle-Ottawa scale risk of bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ahrens 2003 [ | ★★★★ | ☆☆ | ★★★ | Poor |
| Campbell 2003 [ | ★★★★ | ☆☆ | ★★★ | Poor |
| Cox 2012 [ | ★★★★ | ☆☆ | ★★☆ | Poor |
| Daly 2010 [ | ★★★★ | ★★ | ★★★ | Good |
| Dowdy 1998 [ | ★★★★ | ★☆ | ★★★ | Good |
| Hatler 2012 [ | ★★★★ | ☆☆ | ★★★ | Poor |
| Holloran 1995 [ | ★★★☆ | ☆☆ | ★★★ | Poor |
| Knaus 1990 [ | ★★★☆ | ★☆ | ★★★ | Good |
| Lamba 2012 [ | ★★★★ | ☆☆ | ★★★ | Poor |
| Lilly 2000 [ | ★★★★ | ★☆ | ★★★ | Good |
| McCannon 2012 [ | ★★★★ | ☆☆ | ★★★ | Poor |
| Norton 2007 [ | ★★★☆ | ☆☆ | ★★★ | Poor |
| Quenot 2012 [ | ★★★★ | ☆☆ | ★★★ | Poor |
| Shelton 2010 [ | ★★★★ | ☆☆ | ★★★ | Poor |
Using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, stars are awarded for each quaity item, with the maximum number of stars in the "Selection," "Comparability," and "Outcome" being four, two, and three, respectively. In the table, solid stars indicate stars awarded for quality items, while open stars indicate quality items which were absent
GRADE summary of findings table - primary outcomes
*The risk in the intervention group (and its 95 % confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95 % CI).
CI confidence interval, RR risk ratio, OR odds ratio, DNR do not resuscitate, RCT randomized controlled trial
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence
High quality: we are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect
Moderate quality: we are moderately confident in the effect estimate. The true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different
Low quality: our confidence in the effect estimate is limited. The true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect
Very low quality: we have very little confidence in the effect estimate. The true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect
Justifications for grading
1. Half of studies are cohort studies of poor rather than good quality according to the Newcastle-Ottawa scale
2. Statistically significant heterogeneity; however, between large and small effects rather than between positive and negative effects
3. Only included DNR status recorded in the medical chart; may not have included those instances where life support is withdrawn and DNR status is assumed
4. One of the two included trials used cluster randomization, which have artificially narrowed the confidence interval; the resulting pooled estimate may thus be overly precise
5. Marked clinical heterogeneity between populations, confirmed with statistical heterogeneity, with inconsistent results crossing the line of no effect
GRADE Summary of findings table - secondary outcomes
*The risk in the intervention group (and its 95 % confidence interval) is based on the assumed risk in the comparison group and the relative effect of the intervention (and its 95 % CI).
CI confidence interval, RR risk ratio, OR odds ratio, RCT randomized controlled trial, MD mean difference
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence
High quality: we are very confident that the true effect lies close to that of the estimate of the effect
Moderate quality: we are moderately confident in the effect estimate. The true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different
Low quality: our confidence in the effect estimate is limited. The true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect
Very low quality: we have very little confidence in the effect estimate. The true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect
Justifications for grading
1. Study data from single RCT with high risk of bias
2. Single RCT used cluster randomization, which may have artificially narrowed the confidence interval
3. Statistically significant heterogeneity; however, between large and small effects rather than between positive and negative effects
4. Half of studies are cohort studies of poor rather than good quality according to the Newcastle-Ottawa scale
5. Marked clinical heterogeneity between populations, confirmed with statistical heterogeneity, with inconsistent results crossing the line of no effect
6. One of the two included trials used cluster randomization, which may have artificially narrowed the confidence interval; the resulting pooled estimate may thus be overly precise despite our statistical adjustment using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs); however, the direction of effect did not change with large or small ICCs as the pooled effect is near the line of no effect
7. Data reported as median and interquartile range; statistical adjustment needed to obtain mean and standard deviation for pooled results
8. Type of cost reported in study (fixed, variable or total) varied, limiting precision of estimate
Fig. 2Proportion of patients with documented goals-of-care discussions
Fig. 3Documented code status/‘do not resuscitate’ status
Fig. 4Documented decisions to withdraw or withhold treatments
Fig. 5Patient and family literacy in end-of-life care
Fig. 6Quality of communication between family/substitute decision-maker and health care providers
Fig. 7Health care resource utilization - duration of mechanical ventilation (days). a Studies including both intensive care unit survivors and non-survivors. b Studies including intensive care unit non-survivors only
Fig. 8Health care resource utilization - length of intensive care unit stay (days). a Studies including both intensive care unit survivors and non-survivors. b Studies including intensive care unit non-survivors only
Fig. 9Health care resource utilization - mean length of hospital stay (days), Studies including both intensive care unit survivors and non-survivors
Fig. 10Health care resource utilization - financial costs, Studies including both intensive care unit survivors and non-survivors