Maureen E Lyon1,2,3, Sarah Caceres4, Rachel K Scott5, Debra Benator6, Linda Briggs7, Isabella Greenberg8, Lawrence J D'Angelo1, Yao I Cheng9, Jichuan Wang2,3,10. 1. Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, 571630Children's National Hospital, Washington, District of Columbia (DC), USA. 2. Center for Translational Research/Children's Research Institute, Washington, DC, USA. 3. George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC, USA. 4. Nova Southeastern University School of Nursing, Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA. 5. MedStar: Health Research Institute and Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC, USA. 6. Washington DC Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Washington, DC, USA. 7. Respecting Choices, Coalition to Transform Advance Care Innovations, Washington, DC, USA. 8. Medical Education, Children's National Hospital, Washington, DC, USA. 9. RELIGroup, Inc., Baltimore, MD, USA. 10. Division of Biostatistics & Study Methodology, Center for Translational Research/Children's Research Institute, Washington, DC, USA.
Abstract
CONTEXT: The effect of advance care planning (ACP) interventions on the trajectory of end-of-life treatment preference congruence between patients and surrogate decision-makers is unstudied. OBJECTIVE: To identify unobserved distinctive patterns of congruence trajectories and examine how the typology of outcome development differed between ACP and controls. METHODS: Multisite, assessor-blinded, intent-to-treat, randomized clinical trial enrolled participants between October 2013 to March 2017 from 5 hospital-based HIV clinics. Persons living with HIV(PLWH)/surrogate dyads were randomized to 2 weekly 60-minute sessions: ACP (1) ACP facilitated conversation, (2) advance directive completion; or Control (1) Developmental/relationship history, (2) Nutrition/Exercise. Growth Mixed Modeling was used for 18-month post-intervention analysis. FINDINGS: 223 dyads (N = 449 participants) were enrolled. PLWH were 56% male, aged 22 to 77 years, and 86% African American. Surrogates were 56% female, aged 18 to 82 years, and 84% African American. Two latent classes (High vs. Low) of congruence growth trajectory were identified. ACP influenced the trajectory of outcome growth (congruence in all 5 AIDS related situations) by latent class. ACP dyads had a significantly higher probability of being in the High Congruence latent class compared to controls (52%, 75/144 dyads versus 27%, 17/62 dyads, p = 0.001). The probabilities of perfect congruence diminished at 3-months post-intervention but was then sustained. ACP had a significant effect (β = 1.92, p = 0.006, OR = 7.10, 95%C.I.: 1.729, 26.897) on the odds of being in the High Congruence class. CONCLUSION: ACP had a significant effect on the trajectory of congruence growth over time. ACP dyads had 7 times the odds of congruence, compared to controls. Three-months post-intervention is optimal for booster sessions.
CONTEXT: The effect of advance care planning (ACP) interventions on the trajectory of end-of-life treatment preference congruence between patients and surrogate decision-makers is unstudied. OBJECTIVE: To identify unobserved distinctive patterns of congruence trajectories and examine how the typology of outcome development differed between ACP and controls. METHODS: Multisite, assessor-blinded, intent-to-treat, randomized clinical trial enrolled participants between October 2013 to March 2017 from 5 hospital-based HIV clinics. Persons living with HIV(PLWH)/surrogate dyads were randomized to 2 weekly 60-minute sessions: ACP (1) ACP facilitated conversation, (2) advance directive completion; or Control (1) Developmental/relationship history, (2) Nutrition/Exercise. Growth Mixed Modeling was used for 18-month post-intervention analysis. FINDINGS: 223 dyads (N = 449 participants) were enrolled. PLWH were 56% male, aged 22 to 77 years, and 86% African American. Surrogates were 56% female, aged 18 to 82 years, and 84% African American. Two latent classes (High vs. Low) of congruence growth trajectory were identified. ACP influenced the trajectory of outcome growth (congruence in all 5 AIDS related situations) by latent class. ACP dyads had a significantly higher probability of being in the High Congruence latent class compared to controls (52%, 75/144 dyads versus 27%, 17/62 dyads, p = 0.001). The probabilities of perfect congruence diminished at 3-months post-intervention but was then sustained. ACP had a significant effect (β = 1.92, p = 0.006, OR = 7.10, 95%C.I.: 1.729, 26.897) on the odds of being in the High Congruence class. CONCLUSION: ACP had a significant effect on the trajectory of congruence growth over time. ACP dyads had 7 times the odds of congruence, compared to controls. Three-months post-intervention is optimal for booster sessions.
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