Goals of surgical interventions in youths receiving palliative care

Article indépendant

ELLIS, Danielle I. | CHEN, Li | GORDON WEXLER, Samara | AVERY, Madeline | KIM, Tommy D. | KAPLAN, Amy J. | MAZZOLA, Emanuele | KELLEHER, Cassandra | WOLFE, Joanne

IMPORTANCE: Most youths receiving palliative care undergo many surgical interventions over their lifetimes. The intended purposes of interventions in the context of goals of care are not commonly articulated. OBJECTIVE: To describe the goals and purposes of surgical intervention in youths receiving palliative care and propose a framework discussing intervention using goal-oriented language. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This retrospective cohort analysis was conducted among a subset of patients enrolled between April 2017 and March 2021 in a prospective multicenter cohort study of youths receiving palliative care (the Pediatric Palliative Care Research Network's Shared Data and Research [SHARE] Study). Patients younger than 30 years receiving palliative care services were eligible for inclusion in SHARE, and all enrolled at Boston Children's Hospital/Dana Farber Cancer Institute, a SHARE site, were included in this study. Goals and purposes of all surgical interventions from the time of diagnosis through the present were abstracted from patient records. A goal and purpose framework was generated using a hybrid deductive-inductive approach based on established goals-of-care frameworks and the clinical context of surgical interventions. Data were analyzed in September 2023. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Primary outcomes included goals and purposes of surgical interventions performed in the study population. RESULTS: Among 197 youths receiving palliative care (mean [SD] age at palliative care start, 8.01 [7.53] years; 108 male [54.8%]; 6 Asian [3.0%], 12 Black [6.1%], 129 White [65.5%], and 16 with >1 race [8.1%]; 27 Hispanic [13.7%] and 142 not Hispanic [72.1%]), almost all individuals (189 youths [95.9%]) underwent at least 1 surgical intervention (mean [SD] 17.5 [16.3] interventions; median [IQR] 13 [5-22] interventions). Of 3331 surgical interventions, there were 878 interventions (26.5%) conducted with the goal of life extension, 1229 interventions (37.1%) conducted for life enhancement, and 79 interventions (2.4%) conducted for both goals; the remaining 1130 interventions (34.1%) held neither goal. Most interventions were performed with the purpose of diagnosis (1092 interventions [32.9%]) or cure and repair (1055 interventions [31.8%]), with fewer performed for the purpose of placing or maintaining assistive technology (696 interventions [21.0%]) or for supportive (434 interventions [13.1%]) or temporizing (39 interventions [1.2%]) purposes. Patients with cardiovascular disease and cancers constituted approximately half (592 patients [56.1%]) of those undergoing curative or repair interventions, whereas youths with neurologic or genetic conditions constituted approximately half (244 patients [56.2%]) of those undergoing supportive interventions. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this cohort study, nearly all youths underwent surgical intervention, and the purposes of intervention differed by serious illness type. These findings suggest that conversations centered on a proposed framework concerning goals and purposes of surgical intervention may facilitate goal-concordant, high-quality care for youths with serious illness.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.44072

Voir la revue «JAMA network open, 7»

Autres numéros de la revue «JAMA network open»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Goals of surgical interventions in youths rec...

Article | ELLIS, Danielle I. | JAMA network open | n°11 | vol.7

IMPORTANCE: Most youths receiving palliative care undergo many surgical interventions over their lifetimes. The intended purposes of interventions in the context of goals of care are not commonly articulated. OBJECTIVE: To describ...

Surgical intervention in patients receiving p...

Article | ELLIS, Danielle I. | Pediatrics | n°2 | vol.151

Background and objectives: Many patients receiving pediatric palliative care (PPC) present with surgically treatable problems. The role of surgery in the care of these patients, however, has not yet been defined. We conducted a co...

Surgical intervention in patients receiving p...

Article indépendant | ELLIS, Danielle I. | Pediatrics | n°2 | vol.151

Background and objectives: Many patients receiving pediatric palliative care (PPC) present with surgically treatable problems. The role of surgery in the care of these patients, however, has not yet been defined. We conducted a co...

De la même série

Preferred and actual location of death in ado...

Article indépendant | ODEJIDE, Oreofe O. | JAMA network open | n°1 | vol.8

IMPORTANCE: Adolescent and young adult (AYA) patients with advanced cancer often die in hospital settings. Data characterizing the degree to which this pattern of care is concordant with patient goals are sparse. OBJECTIVE: To eva...

Knowledge of and preferences for medical aid ...

Article indépendant | KOZLOV, Elissa | JAMA network open | n°2 | vol.8

IMPORTANCE: Medical aid in dying (MAID) is legal in jurisdictions covering more than one-fifth of the US population and has been used by a largely White, educated population. The extent to which knowledge of MAID and preferences f...

Algorithm-based palliative care in patients w...

Article indépendant | PARIKH, Ravi B. | JAMA network open | n°2 | vol.8

IMPORTANCE: Among patients with advanced solid malignant tumors, early specialty palliative care (PC) is guideline recommended, but strategies to increase PC access and effectiveness in community oncology are lacking. OBJECTIVE: T...

Hospice use among Medicare beneficiaries with...

Article indépendant | BOCK, Meredith | JAMA network open | n°3 | vol.8

IMPORTANCE: Neurodegenerative disorders are now the most common reason that Medicare beneficiaries enroll in hospice for end-of-life care. People with all-cause dementia have high rates of suboptimal hospice use, but little is kno...

Assisted dying and the slippery slope argumen...

Article indépendant | DELIENS, Luc | JAMA network open | n°4 | vol.8

While the social and political debate around assisted dying remains fierce and unremitting, legalization of assisted dying has expanded significantly in Europe, North America, and Australia during the past 20 years. Assisted dying...

Chargement des enrichissements...