| Literature DB >> 31881958 |
C M M Veldhoven1,2, N Nutma3, W De Graaf4, H Schers5, C A H H V M Verhagen3, K C P Vissers3, Y Engels3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early identification of palliative patients is challenging. The Surprise Question (SQ1; Would I be surprised if this patient were to die within 12 months?) is widely used to identify palliative patients. However, its predictive value is low. Therefore, we added a second question (SQ2) to SQ1: 'Would I be surprised if this patient is still alive after 12 months?' We studied the accuracy of this double surprise question (DSQ) in a general practice.Entities:
Keywords: Death; General practice; Identification; Palliative care; Prediction
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31881958 PMCID: PMC6935168 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-019-0503-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Characteristics of patients aged ≥75 years, grouped by SQ1 answers and DSQ answers
| SQ1 | DSQ | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 1 | Group 2a | Group 2b | All patients | |
| Age; mean (sd) | 82 (4.67) | 86 (5.24) | 82 (4.67) | 86 (5.23) | 87 (5.32) | 84 (5.46) |
| Gender; female n (%) | 87 (131 (66%) | 88/161 (55%) | 87 (131 (66%) | 77/139 (55%) | 11/22 (50%) | 175/292 (60%) |
| Living situation; n (%) | ||||||
| -at home | 88/122 (72%) | 91/154 (59%) | 88/122 (72%) | 79/133 (59%) | 12/21 (57%) | 179/276 (65%) |
| -residential home | 33/122 (27%) | 61/154 (40%) | 33/122 (27%) | 52/133 (39%) | 9/21 (43%) | 94/271 (34%) |
| -with family, other than partner | 1/122 (1%) | 2/154 (1%) | 1/122 (1%) | 2/133 (2%) | 0/21 (0%) | 3/276 (1%) |
| Marital status; n (%) | ||||||
| -married or living together | 69/124 (56%) | 55/156 (35%) | 69/124 (56%) | 48/135 (36%) | 7/21 (33%) | 124/280 (44%) |
| -widow or single | 55/124 (%) | 101/156 (65%) | 55/124 (44%) | 87/135 (64%) | 14/21 (67%) | 156/280 (56%) |
| Care provider; n (%) | ||||||
| -child | 19/123 (15%) | 65/155 (42%) | 19/123 (15%) | 55/134 (41%) | 10/21 (48%) | 84/278 (30%) |
| -partner | 1/123 (1%) | 6/155 (4%) | 1/123 (1%) | 6/134 (5%) | 0/21 (0%) | 7/278 (3%) |
| -other | 10/123 (8%) | 18/155 (12%) | 10/123 (8%) | 14/134 (10%) | 4/21 (19%) | 28/278 (10%) |
| -unknown or none | 93/123 (76%) | 66/155 (43%) | 93/123 (76%) | 59/134 (44%) | 7/21 (33%) | 159/278 (57%) |
| Home care; n (%) | 18/123 (15%) | 83/155 (54%) | 18/123 (15%) | 67/134 (50%) | 16/21 (76%) | 101/278 (36%) |
| Diseasesb; n (%) | ||||||
| -cancer | 2/123 (2%) | 19/155 (12%) | 2/123 (2%) | 11/134 (8%) | 8/21 (38%) | 21/278 (8%) |
| -organ failurec | 24/123 (20%) | 38/155 (25%) | 24/123 (20%) | 67/134 (50%) | 16/21 (76%) | 107/278 (39%) |
| -cognitive impairment | 10/123 (8%) | 38/155 (25%) | 10/123 (8%) | 34/134 (25%) | 4/21 (19%) | 48/278 (17%) |
| -chronic heart failure | 7/123 (6%) | 23/155 (15%) | 7/123 (6%) | 15/134 (11%) | 8/21 (38%) | 30/278 (11%) |
aFor some patients that have moved out of the practice, data are missing and therefore totals differ
bPatients were often diagnosed with more diseases, therefore total percentages exceed 100%
cOrgan failure: defined as having COPD, chronic heart failure, chronic kidney failure and/or neurological degenerative disease
Format for extracting data out of the patient files
| Consultations GP | Consultations at practice, also for small surgery. |
| Telephonic consultations GP | Telephonic consultations or mail contact with patient or caregiver/family, not regarding practicalities such as faxing medical data, or only to inform about lab results. Also: A reaction from the GP at a medical question from the patient, asked by telephone to the assistant. |
| Home visits GP | Home visits of the GP. |
| Consultations practice nurse | Consultations, telephonic consultations, home visits, mail contact and reactions to questions from the patient asked to the assistant, by the somatic and psychological practice nurse or the specialized nurse, not regarding practicalities, or only to inform about lab results. |
| Consultations practice assistant | Consultations, telephonic consultations, home visits, mail contact and reactions to questions from the patient, not regarding practicalities such as faxing medical data or to repeat medication recipes, or only to inform about lab results. Also for diagnostic tests, wound controls and small surgery. If the (telephonic) consultation of the assistant was followed by a consultation or home visit of the GP, only the latter was counted. |
| Quality of palliative care and ACP | Everything regarding the aspects of palliative care and ACP, noted in the patient file by the GP, the assistant, the practice nurse or the specialized nurse. |
| If a will statement was uploaded into the patient file, any ACP directives that it contained were counted. | |
| Dimensions: | |
| Somatic: symptoms, complaints, general health | |
| Psychological: fear, depressed mood, emotions, anger, denial, anxiety, worries | |
| Social: social contacts, tensions between patient and loved ones or care providers, financial worries, leaving loved ones when dying, saying goodbyes | |
| Existential: things that occupy someone, balance of life, questions regarding life and death, preparing for dying, a wish to die, feeling powerless or dependant, hope, faith | |
| Home care | If anywhere during the year, home care was given, it was counted as ‘yes’. |
| Diseases | Also diseases that were diagnosed before the screening with the SQs were counted. |
| Cancer: only when active disease or active treatment | |
| Cardiovascular disease: all cardiovascular diseases, including hypertension, cardiovascular incidents and vascular disease. |
Characteristics or outcomes not mentioned here were unambiguous to extract
Fig. 1Flow chart: Inclusion and analysis of patients
Accuracy of SQ1 and of SQ2
| Total, | Died, | Survived, | Sensitivitya, % (95% CI) | Specificitya, % (95% CI) | PPVa, % (95% CI) | NPVa, % (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SQ1 | |||||||
| No | 161 | 24 | 137 | 24/26 = 92.3% (74.9–9.1%) | 129/266 = 48.5% (42.4–54.7%) | 24/161 = 14.9% (9.8–21.4%) | 129/131 = 98.5% (94.6–99.8%) |
| Yes | 131 | 2 | 129 | ||||
| Total | 292 | 26 | 266 | ||||
| SQ2b | |||||||
| Yes | 22 | 10 | 12 | 10/24 = 41.7% (22.1–3.4%) | 125/137 = 91.2% (85.2–95.4%) | 10/22 = 45.5% (24.4–67.8%) | 125/139 = 89.9% (83.7–94.4%) |
| No | 139 | 14 | 125 | ||||
| Total | 161 | 24 | 137 | ||||
Specificity: ability to correctly detect patients who are not dying
PPV Positive predictive value: ability to predict death
NPV Negative predictive value: ability to predict survival
a Sensitivity: ability to correctly detect patients who are dying
b SQ2 was only answered for patients with a negative answer to SQ1
Contact with GP and out of hours service, ER visits and hospitalizations; means and standard deviations per answering group on the DSQ
| Group 1 ( | Group 2 ( | Group 3 ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consultations GP; mean (SD) | |||
| - At practice | 3.45 (2.81) | 3.69 (3.36) | 3.90 (4.73) |
| - Telephonic consultation | 1.58 (1.66) | 2.99 (3.67) | 2.05 (1.53) |
| - Home visits | 1.10 (2.39) | 4.46 (6.79) | 7.10 (6.72) |
| Total | 6.13 (4.42) | 11.14 (8.29) | 13.05 (6.98) |
| Total contact with general practiced | 8.87 (6.11) | 15.23 (10.49) | 17.24 (9.16) |
| Contact with out of hours service; mean (SD) | |||
| - Consultation | 0.05 (0.22) | 0.09 (0.35) | 0.00 (0.00) |
| - Telephonic consultation | 0.11 (0.38) | 0.37 (0.88) | 0.81 (1.12) |
| - Home visit | 0.09 (0.43) | 0.31 (0.71) | 0.48 (0.81) |
| Total | 0.25 (0.68) | 0.77 (1.42) | 1.29 (1.59) |
| Emergency Room visits; mean (SD) | 0.19 (0.50) | 0.26 (0.55) | 0.14 (0.36) |
| Hospitalizations; mean (SD) | 0.15 (0.42) | 0.16 (0.42) | 0.24 (0.54) |
aGroup 1: SQ1 = yes
bGroup 2: SQ1 = no, SQ2 = no
cGroup 3: SQ1 = no, SQ2 = yes
dAlso including contacts with GP practice assistant and practice nurse
Palliative care aspects, analyzed per answering group on the DSQ
| Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dimensions discussedd; n (%) | |||
| - Somatic | 115 (94%) | 127 (98%) | 21 (100%) |
| - Social | 32 (26%) | 49 (38%) | 8 (38%) |
| - Psychological | 45 (37%) | 59 (46%) | 12 (57%) |
| - Existential | 22 (18%) | 41 (32%) | 12 (57%) |
| Total number of dimensions; median (IQR) | 2 (1) | 2 (2) | 3 (1) |
| ACP directivese; median (IQR) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (2) |
| ACP aspectsd; n (%) | |||
| - Discussing end-of-life wishes | 12 (10%) | 17 (13%) | 3 (14%) |
| - Discussing dying scenarios | 0 (0%) | 2 (2%) | 3 (14%) |
| - Discussing preferred place of death | 0 (0%) | 4 (3%) | 4 (19%) |
| - Assignment for out of hours GP care | 5 (4%) | 16 (12%) | 5 (24%) |
| Total number of ACP aspects and directives; median (IQR) | 0 (0) | 0 (1) | 1 (3) |
| At least one ACP aspect or directive | 24 (20%) | 44 (34%) | 11 (52%) |
| At least one ACP aspects or directive discussed before May 2016 | 41 (34%) | 75 (58%) | 17 (81%) |
| At least one ACP aspects or directive, over all time | 53 (43%) | 91 (71%) | 19 (90%) |
| Other palliative care aspectsa; n (%) | |||
| - Discussing personal aspects of quality of life | 0 (0%) | 3 (2%) | 0 (0%) |
| - Discussing personal goals | 2 (2%) | 4 (3%) | 3 (14%) |
| - Discussing preferences for treatment | 18 (15%) | 42 (33%) | 5 (24%) |
| - Involving family and loved-ones in planning care | 18 (15%) | 42 (33%) | 11 (52%) |
| - Providing care for family and loved-ones | 2 (2%) | 10 (8%) | 3 (14%) |
aGroup 1: SQ1 = yes
bGroup 2: SQ1 = no, SQ2 = no
cGroup 3: SQ1 = no, SQ2 = yes
dDimensions, ACP aspects and palliative care aspects: when at least once discussed and documented
eDirectives include: CPR, hospital admissions, mechanical ventilation, antibiotics and artificial feeding and liquid administration