| Literature DB >> 35180233 |
Jennifer Arney1,2, Caroline Gray3, Jack A Clark4, Donna Smith1,5, Annie Swank2, Daniel D Matlock6, Jennifer Melcher1,5, Fasiha Kanwal1,5,7, Aanand D Naik1,5,8,9.
Abstract
Advanced Liver Disease (AdvLD) is common, morbid, and associated with high likelihood of death. Patients may not fully understand their prognosis and are often unprepared for the course of illness. Little is known about how and when to deliver prognosis-related information to patients with AdvLD, who should participate, and what should be discussed. We conducted in-depth interviews with a multi-profession sample of Hepatology clinicians and patients with AdvLD. Participants were drawn from three geographically diverse facilities (New England, Texas, California). We used inductive and deductive qualitative data analysis approaches to identify themes related to AdvLD prognosis discussions. Thematic analysis focused on content, timing, and participants' roles in prognosis discussions. In total, 31 patients with AdvLD and 26 multi-profession clinicians completed interviews. Most participants provided a broad conceptualization of prognosis beyond predictions of survival, including expectations about illness course, ways to manage or avoid complications and a need to address patients' emotions. Patients favored initiating discussions early in the AdvLD course and welcomed a multi-profession approach to conducting discussions. Clinicians favored a larger role for specialty physicians. All participants recognized that AdvLD prognosis discussions occur infrequently and favored a structured, standardized approach to broadly discussing prognosis. Patients with AdvLD and their clinicians favored a multifaceted approach to prognosis conversations including discussions of life expectancy, predictions about likely course of liver disease, and expected changes in function and capabilities over time. Structured and early prognosis discussions should be part of routine AdvLD care.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35180233 PMCID: PMC8856527 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Demographic characteristics of the study population.
| Patients (n = 31) | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| 67 (54–87) | ||
|
| ||
| African American | 7 (22.6) | |
| White, non-Hispanic | 17 (54.8) | |
| Hispanic | 3 (9.6) | |
| Other | 2 (6.5) | |
| No Response | 2 (6.5) | |
|
| ||
| Less than High School Grad | 2 (6.5) | |
| High School graduate or some college | 23 (74.1) | |
| College graduate | 4 (12.9) | |
| No Response | 2 (6.5) | |
|
| ||
| <$20,000 | 10 (32.3) | |
| $20,000 –$50,000 | 14 (45.1) | |
| >$50,000 | 2 (6.5) | |
| Don’t Know or Refused | 5 (16.1) | |
|
| ||
| Married | 16 (51.6) | |
| Widowed, Separated or Divorced | 9 (29) | |
| Never married | 4 (12.9) | |
| No Response | 2 (6.5) | |
|
| ||
| 2–3 | 4 (12.9) | |
| 4–6 | 14 (45.2) | |
| 7–9 | 8 (25.8) | |
| 10–11 | 3 (9.6) | |
| No Response | 2 (6.5) | |
|
| ||
| High blood pressure | 22 (71) | |
| Arthritis or any kind of rheumatism | 20 (64.5) | |
| Chronic neck, back or spine troubles | 18 (58) | |
| Depression and/or Anxiety | 24 (77.4) | |
| Cancer | 13 (41.9) | |
| Diabetes | 12 (38.7) | |
| Heart disease | 9 (29) | |
| Kidney, Stomach and/or Bladder trouble | 26 (83.9) | |
| Migraines | 7 (22.6) | |
| Other mental health issues | 7 (22.6) | |
| Anemia | 5 (16.1) | |
| Asthma, Bronchitis or Lung disease | 9 (29) | |
| Stroke | 3 (9.6) | |
| Repeated seizures | 1 (3) | |
| No Response | 2 (6.5) | |
| A | 25 (80.6) | |
| B or C | 6 (19.4) | |
|
| Value | |
| Gastroenterology, Hepatology, or Transplant Physicians | 9 (34.6) | |
| Gastroenterology Physician Assistants | 2 (7.7) | |
| Gastroenterology/Hepatology nurses and nurse practitioners | 7 (27) | |
| Social Workers & Psychologists | 3 (11.5) | |
| Palliative Care Providers | 4 (15.4) | |
| Pharmacists | 1 (3.8) | |
| Women | 20 (77) | |
| Men | 6 (23) | |
*Reflects the number of patients who self-reported having that condition.
Prognosis discussions for an integrated approach to advanced liver disease care.
| Initiate | ||
|---|---|---|
| Components | Activities | Roles and Responsibilities |
| Building Rapport | Identify emotions, making a connection, ask about fears and worries, understanding desire for information | Member of the Hepatology team with personal connection to patient who can initiate prognosis discussions |
| Discussing Prognosis | Provide reliable time estimates for survival, communicate what to expect about course of illness, use numbers with ranges, include charts or figures | Member of the Hepatology team who understands prognosis models and can discuss illness trajectories |
| Identify patient priorities | Elicit what matters most (values), transform values into specific, measurable outcome goals (what do you want to achieve from your care), ask about care preferences (what is burdensome, what are you willing and not willing to do for self-care and treatment) | Member of the Hepatology team skilled at serious illness conversations and eliciting patient priorities (nursing, social work, advanced practitioners) |
| Align care to priorities | Identify the full, holistic range of care options for advanced liver disease (nutrition, physical therapy, palliative care, symptom management), develop and apply care pathways to aligning care options to achieve outcome goals | Hepatology clinicians, dieticians, physical therapists, social workers, palliative care, pharmacists, mental health, addiction specialists |