Identification of patient-reported outcome phenotypes among oncology patients with palliative care needs

Article indépendant

KAUFMANN, Tara L. | GETZ, Kelly D. | HSU, Jesse Y. | BENNETT, Antonia V. | TAKVORIAN, Samuel U. | KAMAL, Arif H. | DEMICHELE, Angela

PURPOSE: Despite evidence-based guidelines recommending early palliative care, it remains unclear how to identify and refer oncology patients, particularly in settings with constrained access to palliative care. We hypothesize that patient-reported outcome (PRO) data can be used to characterize patients with palliative care needs. To determine if PRO data can identify latent phenotypes that characterize indications for specialty palliative care referral. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective study of self-reported symptoms on the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System collected from solid tumor oncology patients (n = 745) referred to outpatient palliative care. Data were collected as part of routine clinical care from October 2012 to March 2018 at eight community and academic sites. We applied latent profile analysis to identify PRO phenotypes and examined the association of phenotypes with clinical and demographic characteristics using multinomial logistic regression. RESULTS: We identified four PRO phenotypes: (1) Low Symptoms (n = 295, 39.6%), (2) Moderate Pain/Fatigue + Mood (n = 180, 24.2%), (3) Moderate Pain/Fatigue + Appetite + Dyspnea (n = 201, 27.0%), and (4) High Symptoms (n = 69, 9.3%). In a secondary analysis of 421 patients, we found that two brief items assessing social and existential needs aligned with higher severity symptom and psychological distress phenotypes. CONCLUSION: Oncology patients referred to outpatient palliative care in a real-world setting can be differentiated into clinically meaningful phenotypes using brief, routinely collected PRO measures. Latent modeling provides a mechanism to use patient-reported data on a population level to identify distinct subgroups of patients with unmet palliative needs.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1200/OP.20.00849

Voir la revue «JCO oncology practice»

Autres numéros de la revue «JCO oncology practice»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Identification of patient-reported outcome ph...

Article indépendant | KAUFMANN, Tara L. | JCO oncology practice

PURPOSE: Despite evidence-based guidelines recommending early palliative care, it remains unclear how to identify and refer oncology patients, particularly in settings with constrained access to palliative care. We hypothesize tha...

Oncology and palliative care integration : co...

Article | KAUFMANN, Tara L. | Journal of oncology practice | n°9 | vol.13

Recent payment reforms in health care have spurred thinking regarding how strengthened partnerships can cocreate quality and value. Oncology is an important area in which to consider further collaborations in patient care, as a re...

Oncology and palliative care integration : co...

Article indépendant | KAUFMANN, Tara L. | Journal of oncology practice | n°9 | vol.13

Recent payment reforms in health care have spurred thinking regarding how strengthened partnerships can cocreate quality and value. Oncology is an important area in which to consider further collaborations in patient care, as a re...

De la même série

End-of-life health resource utilization for l...

Article indépendant | LEUNG, Bonnie | JCO oncology practice | n°10 | vol.18

Purpose: Limited English-proficient (LEP) patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) may receive less palliative care services and more likely to receive aggressive end-of-life (EoL) care. Goals of this retrospective cohort ...

Can community health workers increase palliat...

Article indépendant | SEDHOM, Ramy | JCO oncology practice | n°2 | vol.17

PURPOSE: African American patients with cancer underutilize advance care planning (ACP) and palliative care (PC). This feasibility study investigated whether community health workers (CHWs) could improve ACP and PC utilization for...

High-intensity end-of-life care among patient...

Article indépendant | ORTIZ-ORTIZ, Karen J. | JCO oncology practice | n°2 | vol.17

PURPOSE : High-intensity care with undue suffering among patients with cancer at the end of life (EoL) is associated with poor quality of life. We examined the pattern and predictors of high-intensity care among patients with GI c...

Opioid risk screening in an oncology palliati...

Article indépendant | GREINER, Rebecca S. | JCO oncology practice

PURPOSE: Little information exists on factors that predict opioid misuse in oncology. We adopted the Screener and Opioid Assessment for Patients With Pain-Short Form (SOAPP-SF) and toxicology testing to assess for opioid misuse ri...

Measure scan and synthesis of palliative and ...

Article indépendant | O'HANLON, Claire E. | JCO oncology practice

PURPOSE: Monitoring and improving the quality of palliative and end-of-life cancer care remain pressing needs in the United States. Among existing measures that assess the quality of palliative and end-of-life care, many operation...

Chargement des enrichissements...