Recruitment, follow-up and survival in an 11-country cohort study of patients at the end of life and their relatives

Article indépendant

SCHELIN, Maria E. C. | HEDMAN, Christel | BARNESTEIN-FONSECA, Pilar | EGLOFF, Martina | ELLERSHAW, John E. | FAKSVAG HAUGEN, Dagny | FISCHER, Claudia | JOSHI, Melanie | KORFAGE, Ida J. | LUNDER, Urška | MASON, Stephen | SIMON, Judit | TRIPODORO, Vilma A. | YILDIZ, Berivan | ZAMBRANO, Sofia C. | EYCHMUELLER, Steffen | VAN ZUYLEN, Lia | VAN DER HEIDE, Agnes | FURST, Carl Johan | ILIVE CONSORTIUM

BACKGROUND: Large, international cohort studies generate high-level evidence, but are resource intense. In end-of-life care such studies are scarce. Hence, planning for future studies in terms of data on screening, recruitment, retention and survival remains a challenge. OBJECTIVES: The aim was to describe recruitment, follow-up and survival in a multinational study of patients' and relatives' expectations, concerns and preferences at the end of life. METHODS: In this 11-country cohort study with six months follow-up patients, >18 years old, were included on the basis of an adapted "surprise question" to assess patients´ end of life status. Patients were required to be aware of their limited life expectancy. We collected patient questionnaires (baseline and 1 month), and searched medical records for the date of death. One relative per patient was invited to participate. RESULTS: 26735 patients were screened for inclusion, 3065 (11%) were found eligible and were invited to participate, 1509 chose to participate, i.e. 6% of those initially screened. A total of 699 patients (49%) participated in the 1-month follow-up, with proportions varying according to survival time, from 20% if the patient died at month 2, to 75% if the patient died at month 6. Survival time was not associated with patient gender or age, but with diagnosis, country of residence and healthcare setting. CONCLUSION: Approximately 20 times the desired cohort size had to be screened for eligibility. Prognostication was difficult, we noted a wide distribution of survival after inclusion. Patients' ability to complete follow-up questionnaires declined well before death.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0317002

Voir la revue «Plos one, 20»

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