Journal of pain and symptom management | 2019

Palliative Care Clinician Overestimation of Survival in Advanced Cancer: Disparities and Association With End-of-Life Care.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


CONTEXT\nClinicians frequently overestimate survival time in serious illness.\n\n\nOBJECTIVE\nThe objective of this study was to understand the frequency of overestimation in palliative care (PC) and the relation with end-of-life (EOL) treatment.\n\n\nMETHODS\nThis is a multisite cohort study of 230 hospitalized patients with advanced cancer who consulted with PC between 2013 and 2016. We asked the consulting PC clinician to make their best guess about the patients most likely survival time, assuming that their illnesses are allowed to take their natural course (<24\xa0hours; 24\xa0hours to less than two\xa0weeks; two\xa0weeks to less than three\xa0months; three\xa0months to\xa0less than six\xa0months; six\xa0months or longer). We followed patients for up to six month for mortality and EOL treatment utilization. Patients completed a brief interviewer-facilitated questionnaire at study enrollment.\n\n\nRESULTS\nMedian survival was 37\xa0days (interquartile range: 12\xa0days, 97\xa0days) and 186/230 (81%) died during the follow-up period. Forty-one percent of clinicians predictions were accurate. Among inaccurate prognoses, 85% were overestimates. Among those who died, overestimates were substantially associated with less hospice use (ORadj: 0.40; 95% CI: 0.16-0.99) and later hospice enrollment (within 72\xa0hours of death ORadj: 0.33; 95% CI: 0.15-0.74). PC clinicians were substantially more likely to overestimate survival for patients who identified as Black or Latino compared to others (ORadj: 3.89; 95% CI: 1.64-9.22). EOL treatment preferences did not explain either of these findings.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nOverestimation is common in PC, associated with lower hospice use and a potentially mutable source of racial/ethnic disparity in EOL care.

Volume 57 2
Pages \n 233-240\n
DOI 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2018.10.510
Language English
Journal Journal of pain and symptom management

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