Transitions in prognostic awareness among terminally ill cancer patients in their last 6 months of life examined by multi-state Markov modeling

Article indépendant

HSIU CHEN, Chen | WEN, Fur-Hsing | HOU, Ming-Mo | HSIEH, Chia-Hsun | CHOU, Wen-Chi | CHEN, Jen-Shi | CHANG, Wen-Cheng | TANG, Siew Tzuh

BACKGROUND: Developing accurate prognostic awareness, a cornerstone of preference-based end-of-life (EOL) care decision-making, is a dynamic process involving more prognostic-awareness states than knowing or not knowing. Understanding the transition probabilities and time spent in each prognostic-awareness state can help clinicians identify trigger points for facilitating transitions toward accurate prognostic awareness. The authors examined transition probabilities in distinct prognostic-awareness states between consecutive time points in 247 cancer patients' last 6 months and estimated the time spent in each state. METHODS: Prognostic awareness was categorized into four states: (a) unknown and not wanting to know, state 1; (b) unknown but wanting to know, state 2; (c) inaccurate awareness, state 3; and (d) accurate awareness, state 4. Transitional probabilities were examined by multistate Markov modeling. RESULTS: Initially, 59.5% of patients had accurate prognostic awareness, whereas the probabilities of being in states 1-3 were 8.1%, 17.4%, and 15.0%, respectively. Patients' prognostic awareness generally remained unchanged (probabilities of remaining in the same state: 45.5%-92.9%). If prognostic awareness changed, it tended to shift toward higher prognostic-awareness states (probabilities of shifting to state 4 were 23.2%-36.6% for patients initially in states 1-3, followed by probabilities of shifting to state 3 for those in states 1 and 2 [9.8%-10.1%]). Patients were estimated to spend 1.29, 0.42, 0.68, and 3.61 months in states 1-4, respectively, in their last 6 months. CONCLUSION: Terminally ill cancer patients' prognostic awareness generally remained unchanged, with a tendency to become more aware of their prognosis. Health care professionals should facilitate patients' transitions toward accurate prognostic awareness in a timely manner to promote preference-based EOL decisions. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Terminally ill Taiwanese cancer patients' prognostic awareness generally remained stable, with a tendency toward developing higher states of awareness. Health care professionals should appropriately assess patients' readiness for prognostic information and respect patients' reluctance to confront their poor prognosis if they are not ready to know, but sensitively coach them to cultivate their accurate prognostic awareness, provide desired and understandable prognostic information for those who are ready to know, and give direct and honest prognostic information to clarify any misunderstandings for those with inaccurate awareness, thus ensuring that they develop accurate and realistic prognostic knowledge in time to make end-of-life care decisions.

http://theoncologist.alphamedpress.org/content/22/9/1135

Voir la revue «The Oncologist»

Autres numéros de la revue «The Oncologist»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Transitions in prognostic awareness among ter...

Article indépendant | HSIU CHEN, Chen | The Oncologist

BACKGROUND: Developing accurate prognostic awareness, a cornerstone of preference-based end-of-life (EOL) care decision-making, is a dynamic process involving more prognostic-awareness states than knowing or not knowing. Understan...

Accurate prognostic awareness facilitates, wh...

Article indépendant | TANG, Siew Tzuh | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°4 | vol.55

CONTEXT: Terminally ill cancer patients do not engage in end-of-life (EOL) care discussions or do so only when death is imminent, despite guidelines for EOL care discussions early in their disease trajectory. Most studies on patie...

An individualized, interactive intervention p...

Article | CHEN, Chen Hsiu | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT

CONTEXT/OBJECTIVE: Half of advanced cancer patients do not have accurate prognostic awareness (PA). However, few randomized clinical trials (RCTs) have focused on facilitating patients' PA to reduce their life-sustaining treatment...

De la même série

"Rather one more chemo than one less…"...

Article indépendant | LARYIONAVA, Katsiaryna | The Oncologist | n°2 | vol.23

BACKGROUND: Empirical research demonstrates that there is a tendency to administer tumor-directed therapy to patients with advanced cancer close to death, especially if they are young. The aim of this qualitative study was to unde...

Advance directives, hospitalization, and surv...

Article indépendant | ELSAYEM, Ahmed F. | The Oncologist | n°11 | vol.22

BACKGROUND: To improve the management of advanced cancer patients with delirium in an emergency department (ED) setting, we compared outcomes between patients with delirium positively diagnosed by both the Confusion Assessment Met...

When does the Responsibility of Our Care End ...

Article indépendant | PENSON, Richard T. | The Oncologist | n°3 | vol.7

Extraits d'une ronde organisée par le Kenneth B. Schwartz Center, un centre d'accompagnement du deuil fondé par un patient cancéreux en fin de vie. Deux extraits de réponses apportées par un soignant et les avis de différents pers...

Transitions in prognostic awareness among ter...

Article indépendant | HSIU CHEN, Chen | The Oncologist

BACKGROUND: Developing accurate prognostic awareness, a cornerstone of preference-based end-of-life (EOL) care decision-making, is a dynamic process involving more prognostic-awareness states than knowing or not knowing. Understan...

Predictors of location of death for children ...

Article indépendant | KAYE, Erica C. | The Oncologist

BACKGROUND: In the U.S., more children die from cancer than from any other disease, and more than one third die in the hospital setting. These data have been replicated even in subpopulations of children with cancer enrolled on a ...

Chargement des enrichissements...