| Literature DB >> 33830352 |
Jean Mathews1,2, Breffni Hannon1,2,3, Camilla Zimmermann4,5,6.
Abstract
OPINION STATEMENT: Evidence from randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses has shown that early integration of specialized palliative care improves symptoms and quality of life for patients with advanced cancer. There are various models of early integration, which may be classified based on setting of care and method of palliative care referral. Most successful randomized controlled trials of early palliative care have used a model of specialized teams providing in-person palliative care in free-standing or embedded outpatient clinics. During the COVID-19 pandemic, telehealth has become a prominent model for palliative care delivery. This model of care has been well received by patients and palliative care providers, although evidence to date is limited. Despite evidence from trials that routine early integration of palliative care into oncology care improves patient outcomes, referral to palliative care still occurs mostly according to the judgment of individual oncologists. This hinders equitable access to palliative care and to its known benefits for patients and their caregivers. Automated referral based on triggering criteria is being actively explored as an alternative. In particular, routine technology-assisted symptom screening, combined with targeted needs-based automatic referral to outpatient palliative care, may improve integration and ultimately increase quality of life.Entities:
Keywords: Integrated healthcare systems; Integration; Models of care; Neoplasms; Oncology; Palliative care; Quality of life; Telemedicine
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33830352 PMCID: PMC8027976 DOI: 10.1007/s11864-021-00836-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Treat Options Oncol ISSN: 1534-6277
Evidence from in-person trials of early palliative care for patients with advanced cancer
| Study characteristics | North American Trials | European trials | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Temel 2010 [ | Zimmermann 2014 [ | Temel 2017 [ | Maltoni 2016 [ | Groenvold 2017 [ | Vanbutsele 2018 [ | Scarpi 2018 [ | Franciosi 2019 [ | |
| Country | USA | Canada | USA | Italy | Denmark | Belgium | Italy | Italy |
| Diagnosis | Advanced lung cancer | Advanced lung, gastrointestinal, genitourinary, gynecologic, breast cancers | Incurable lung and gastrointestinal cancer | Metastatic or locally advanced inoperable pancreatic cancer | Patients with metastatic cancer | Advanced cancer due to solid tumor | Inoperable locally advanced or metastatic gastric cancer | Metastatic or locally advanced lung, pancreatic, gastric or biliary cancers |
| Clinician providing palliative care | Specialist physicians and advance practice nurses | Specialized physician and nurse | Physicians and advanced practice nurses | Specialist physician | Multidisciplinary team including physicians, nurses, social workers | Specialized nurse with physician available if needed | Specialist physician | Oncologist specialized in palliative care and palliative care nurse |
| Setting of early palliative care | Embedded in oncology clinic | Free-standing palliative care clinic | Embedded in oncology clinic | Embedded in oncology clinic | Free-standing palliative care clinic | In outpatient and inpatient settings, through an embedded model within oncology services | Embedded in oncology clinic | In outpatient and inpatient settings |
| Timing of early palliative care | Automatic referral within 8 weeks of diagnosis | Automatic referral if prognosis 6–24 months | Automatic referral within 2 months of diagnosis of incurable cancer | Automatic referral within 2 months of diagnosis of advanced disease | Based on screening for palliative care needs - symptom burden and functional decline | Automatic referral if prognosis 12 months and within 3 months of diagnosis of primary tumor or progression | Automatic referral within 2 months of diagnosis of advanced disease | Automatic referral within 2 months of diagnosis of advanced disease |
| Control group | Standard care with palliative care referral on request | Standard care with palliative care referral on request without monthly follow-up | Usual care - palliative care referral on request | Standard care with on-demand early palliative care | Standard care with palliative care referral on request | Multidisciplinary oncology care including nurses, social workers, psychologists | Standard care plus on-demand early palliative care | Standard care with palliative care referral on request |
| Outcomes | QoL, mood, healthcare utilization, survival | QoL, symptoms, satisfaction with care, problem with medical interactions | QoL, depression, end-of-life communication | QoL, mood, caregiver satisfaction with care, healthcare utilization | Change in primary need for each patient, QoL, mood, satisfaction with care, survival | QoL | QoL, patient mood, survival | QoL |
| Result | Improved QOL, depression, less aggressive EOL care, improved survival at 3 months | Improved QoL, symptoms, satisfaction with care at 4 months | Improved QoL, depression, end-of-life communication at 6 months | Improved QoL at 3 months | No effect on primary need | Improved QoL at 3 months | No significant difference in QoL at 3 months | No significant difference in QoL at 3 months |
QoL quality of life
Evidence for telehealth-specialized early palliative care for patients with advanced cancer
| Study characteristics | Bakitas 2009 [ | Kim 2013 [ | Bakitas 2015 [ | Hoek 2017 [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Country | USA | South Korea | USA | The Netherlands |
| Diagnosis | Advanced cancer | Stage IV solid tumor | Advanced cancer | Advanced cancer |
| Telehealth tools used | Telephone | Telephone | Telephone | Videoconferencing using iPads |
| Nature of intervention | Structured psychoeducational and problem-solving sessions | Standardized pain education and telemonitoring | Initial in-person consult followed by weekly telephone coaching sessions | Weekly multidisciplinary palliative care |
| Control group | Usual oncology care | Standardized pain education using video-aided presentation | Delayed palliative care initiation after three months | Primary palliative care by general practitioners supported by specialist as needed |
| Clinician providing palliative care | Advanced practice nurses with palliative care specialized training | Nurse practitioner trained in pain management | Board-certified palliative care clinician and advanced practice nurse | Specialist palliative care nurse or physician |
| Timing of early palliative care | Within 8–12 weeks of new diagnosis | Targeted: pain score >4/10 | Within 30–60 days of diagnosis (early group) or 3 months later (delayed group) | At diagnosis of advanced disease |
| Outcomes | QoL, symptom intensity, mood | Pain, mood, distress, QoL | QoL, symptom impact, mood, 1-year survival | Symptom burden, mood |
| Results | Improved QoL and mood | Improved pain at 1 week | Improved 1-year survival; no difference in QoL, symptoms, mood | Higher symptom burden at 3 months in intervention arm |
QoL quality of life
Fig. 1Key elements of early palliative care. The key elements of early palliative care can be divided into two broad areas: principles and domains of care. We identify four key principles on how care should be provided (care that is flexible, attentive, patient-led, and family-centered) and four key domains (support and coping, managing symptoms, assisting with medical decision-making, and planning for the future).