Survival outcomes in palliative sedation based on referring versus on-call physician prescription

Article indépendant

LOJO-CRUZ, Cristina | MORA-DELGADO, Juan | RIVAS JIMENEZ, Víctor | CARMONA ESPINAZO, Fernando | LOPEZ-SAEZ, Juan-Bosco

This study sought to determine the survival duration of patients who underwent palliative sedation, comparing those who received prescriptions from referring physicians versus on-call physicians. It included all patients over 18 years old who died in the Palliative Care, Internal Medicine, and Oncology units at the Hospital Universitario of Jerez de la Frontera between 1 January 2019, and 31 December 2019. Various factors were analyzed, including age, gender, oncological or non-oncological disease, type of primary tumor and refractory symptoms. Statistical analysis was employed to compare survival times between patients who received palliative sedation from referring physicians and those prescribed by on-call physicians, while accounting for other potential confounding variables. This study revealed that the median survival time after the initiation of palliative sedation was 25 h, with an interquartile range of 8 to 48 h. Notably, if the sedation was prescribed by referring physicians, the median survival time was 30 h, while it decreased to 17 h when prescribed by on-call physicians (RR 0.357; 95% CI 0.146-0.873; p = 0.024). Furthermore, dyspnea as a refractory symptom was associated with a shorter survival time (RR 0.307; 95% CI 0.095-0.985; p = 0.047). The findings suggest that the on-call physician often administered palliative sedation to rapidly deteriorating patients, particularly those experiencing dyspnea, which likely contributed to the shorter survival time following sedation initiation. This study underscores the importance of careful patient selection and prompt initiation of palliative sedation to alleviate suffering.

http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm12165187

Voir la revue «Journal of clinical medicine, 12»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of clinical medicine»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Survival outcomes in palliative sedation base...

Article | LOJO-CRUZ, Cristina | Journal of clinical medicine | n°16 | vol.12

This study sought to determine the survival duration of patients who underwent palliative sedation, comparing those who received prescriptions from referring physicians versus on-call physicians. It included all patients over 18 y...

De la même série

Comprehensive analysis of strong opioid side ...

Article indépendant | HIRAI, Risako | Journal of clinical medicine | n°5 | vol.14

Background/Objectives: There exist multiple opioid-based treatments in palliative care, each with distinct side effect profiles. When adverse events occur, switching opioids can help maintain effective pain management. However, ow...

Role of palliative care in the supportive man...

Article indépendant | HABIB, Muhammad Hamza | Journal of clinical medicine | n°7 | vol.13

Light chain amyloidosis is a plasma-cell disorder with a poor prognosis. It is a progressive condition, causing worsening pain, disability, and life-limiting complications involving multiple organ systems. The medical regimen can ...

Safe management of adverse effects associated...

Article indépendant | ZIMMERMAN, Amanda | Journal of clinical medicine | n°10 | vol.13

In the palliative care population, prescription opioids are often considered viable pain relief options. However, in this complex patient population, the adverse effects of opioid medications should be identified and managed witho...

Discontinuation of palliative brain radiother...

Article indépendant | WINDISCH, Paul | Journal of clinical medicine | n°12 | vol.13

Background: Discontinuation of radiotherapy is rarely discussed in the scientific literature. The goal of this study was, therefore, to estimate the frequency of and reasons for treatment discontinuations in patients receiving rad...

Implementation of a co-design strategy to dev...

Article indépendant | MORKEN, Victoria | Journal of clinical medicine | n°14 | vol.13

Background: Shared decision making (SDM) is the process by which patients and clinicians exchange information and preferences to come to joint healthcare decisions. Clinical dashboards can support SDM by collecting, distilling, an...

Chargement des enrichissements...