Preferred and actual location of death in adolescents and young adults with cancer

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ODEJIDE, Oreofe O. | CERNIK, Colin | UNO, Hajime | FISHER, Lauren | XU, Lanfang | LAURENT, Cecile A. | CANNIZZARO, Nancy | MUNNEKE, Julie | COOPER, Robert M. | LAKIN, Joshua R. | SCHWARTZ, Corey M. | CASPERSON, Mallory | ALTSCHULER, Andrea | WIENER, Lori | KUSHI, Lawrence | CHAO, Chun R. | MACK, Jennifer W.

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 evaluate the extent of concordance between the preferred and actual location of death among AYA patients with cancer. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This multicenter retrospective cohort study included AYA patients (aged 12-39 years) with cancer who died between January 1, 2003, and December 31, 2019, after receiving care at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Kaiser Permanente Northern California or who died between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2019, after receiving care at Kaiser Permanente Southern California. Data were analyzed from January 12 to July 1, 2024. EXPOSURE: Death due to cancer. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Medical record documentation of discussions about preferred location of death, actual location of death, and concordance between preferred and actual location of death. RESULTS: The analytic population included 1929 AYA decedents, of whom 1049 (54.4%) were female; 227 (11.8%), Asian; 157 (8.1%), Black; 514 (26.6%), Hispanic; and 1184 (61.4%), White. Median age at death was 32 (IQR, 25-37) years. A total of 1226 AYA patients (63.6%) had a documented discussion about preferred location of death. Among those with a documented discussion, 594 (48.5%) did not have a documented preference, 402 (32.8%) wanted to die at home, 177 (14.4%) preferred a hospital death, and 48 (3.9%) desired inpatient hospice. Eight hundred and thirty patients (43.0%) died in acute care settings (256 [13.3%] intensive care unit [ICU], 548 [28.4%] hospital [non-ICU], and 26 [1.3%] emergency department), while 643 (33.3%) died at home and 47 (2.4%) in an inpatient hospice. Among the 528 patients with both a documented preferred death location of home, hospital, or inpatient hospice and documented death in one of these locations, the concordance between preferred and actual location of death was 401 (75.9%). One hundred and sixty-four of 172 patients (95.3%) who preferred a hospital death died there; 224 of 317 (70.7%) who preferred a home death died at home, and 13 of 39 (33.3%) who desired to die in inpatient hospice did so. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Although many AYA patients with cancer died in their preferred location, over one-quarter of those who desired to die at home did not realize this goal. These findings highlight the need for effective solutions to enable goal-concordant care for this population.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.54000

Voir la revue «JAMA network open, 8»

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