Early palliative care for patients with advanced cancer : a cluster-randomised controlled trial

Article indépendant

ZIMMERMANN, Camilla | SWAMI, Nadia | KRZYZANOWSKA, Monika | HANNON, Breffni | LEIGHL, Natasha | OZA, Amit | MOORE, Malcolm | RYDALL, Anne | RODIN, Gary | TANNOCK, Ian | DONNER, Allan | LO, Christopher

Background: Patients with advanced cancer have reduced quality of life, which tends to worsen towards the end of life. We assessed the effect of early palliative care in patients with advanced cancer on several aspects of quality of life. Methods: The study took place at the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre (Toronto, ON, Canada), between Dec 1, 2006, and Feb 28, 2011. 24 medical oncology clinics were cluster randomised (in a 1:1 ratio, using a computer-generated sequence, stratified by clinic size and tumour site [four lung, eight gastrointestinal, four genitourinary, six breast, two gynaecological]), to consultation and follow-up (at least monthly) by a palliative care team or to standard cancer care. Complete masking of interventions was not possible; however, patients provided written informed consent to participate in their own study group, without being informed of the existence of another group. Eligible patients had advanced cancer, European Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0-2, and a clinical prognosis of 6-24 months. Quality of life (Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy--Spiritual Well-Being [FACIT-Sp] scale and Quality of Life at the End of Life [QUAL-E] scale), symptom severity (Edmonton Symptom Assessment System [ESAS]), satisfaction with care (FAMCARE-P16), and problems with medical interactions (Cancer Rehabilitation Evaluation System Medical Interaction Subscale [CARES-MIS]) were measured at baseline and monthly for 4 months. The primary outcome was change score for FACIT-Sp at 3 months. Secondary endpoints included change score for FACIT-Sp at 4 months and change scores for other scales at 3 and 4 months. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01248624. Findings: 461 patients completed baseline measures (228 intervention, 233 control); 393 completed at least one follow-up assessment. At 3-months, there was a non-significant difference in change score for FACIT-Sp between intervention and control groups (3·56 points [95% CI -0·27 to 7·40], p=0·07), a significant difference in QUAL-E (2·25 [0·01 to 4·49], p=0·05) and FAMCARE-P16 (3·79 [1·74 to 5·85], p=0·0003), and no difference in ESAS (-1·70 [-5·26 to 1·87], p=0·33) or CARES-MIS (-0·66 [-2·25 to 0·94], p=0·40). At 4 months, there were significant differences in change scores for all outcomes except CARES-MIS. All differences favoured the intervention group. Interpretation: Although the difference in quality of life was non-significant at the primary endpoint, this trial shows promising findings that support early palliative care for patients with advanced cancer.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(13)62416-2

Voir la revue «The Lancet, 383»

Autres numéros de la revue «The Lancet»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Early palliative care for patients with advan...

Article | ZIMMERMANN, Camilla | The Lancet | n°9930 | vol.383

Background: Patients with advanced cancer have reduced quality of life, which tends to worsen towards the end of life. We assessed the effect of early palliative care in patients with advanced cancer on several aspects of quality ...

Early palliative care for patients with advan...

Article indépendant | ZIMMERMANN, Camilla | The Lancet | n°9930 | vol.383

Background: Patients with advanced cancer have reduced quality of life, which tends to worsen towards the end of life. We assessed the effect of early palliative care in patients with advanced cancer on several aspects of quality ...

Early palliative care and quality of dying an...

Article | MAH, Kenneth | BMJ supportive & palliative care | n°e1 | vol.13

OBJECTIVE: Early palliative care (EPC) in the outpatient setting improves quality of life for patients with advanced cancer, but its impact on quality of dying and death (QODD) and on quality of life at the end of life (QOL-EOL) h...

De la même série

Defining and conceptualising the commercial d...

Article indépendant | GILMORE, Anna B. | The Lancet | n°10383 | vol.401

Although commercial entities can contribute positively to health and society there is growing evidence that the products and practices of some commercial actors—notably the largest transnational corporations—are respon...

Redefining vulnerability in the era of Covid-...

Article indépendant | The Lancet | n°10230 | vol.395

What does it mean to be vulnerable? Vulnerable groups of people are those that are disproportionally exposed to risk, but who is included in these groups can change dynamically. A person not considered vulnerable at the outset of ...

What does it mean to be made vulnerable in th...

Article indépendant | AHMAD, Ayesha | The Lancet | n°10235 | vol.395

We read with interest the Editorial about redefining vulnerability in the era of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The Editors recognise underserved and marginalised populations enduring the COVID-19 pandemic, and that the cate...

Felicia Marie Knaul : advocate for better pai...

Article indépendant | DAVIES, Rachael | The Lancet | n°10128 | vol.391

The time before her father died of stomach cancer in 1984 had a lasting impact on Felicia Knaul. “Each day brought new and ever-more challenging horrors—bone metastases popping up throughout his body…lungs filli...

Early palliative care for patients with advan...

Article indépendant | ZIMMERMANN, Camilla | The Lancet | n°9930 | vol.383

Background: Patients with advanced cancer have reduced quality of life, which tends to worsen towards the end of life. We assessed the effect of early palliative care in patients with advanced cancer on several aspects of quality ...

Chargement des enrichissements...