American Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2019

Curative Intent Radiotherapy Delivered Within the Last Year of Life

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Objectives: We studied a cohort of cancer patients that underwent curative-intent radiation within the last year of life (LYOL). Given the unexpectedly short survival, we evaluated the proportion with relapsed/refractory disease, determined causes of death, and explored whether treatment intent was associated with aggressiveness of care at the end of life. Materials and Methods: We extracted and linked claims data and radiotherapy records for patients seen at a single academic institution that died between October 1, 2014, and September 30, 2015. Results: Among 870 cancer patients, 290 were irradiated within the LYOL, of which 287 had treatment intent recorded (101 curative-intent, 186 palliative-intent). The majority of curative-intent patients had hematologic malignancies and/or underwent transplant (44.6%), followed by head and neck (9.9%) and gastrointestinal malignancies (9.9%). Half (n=49; 48.5%) had relapsed/refractory disease at the time of curative-intent radiation, including 13 with metastatic disease. Tumor progression (n=65; 64.4%) was the most common cause of death, followed by treatment-related mortality (n=27; 26.7%), of which transplant/hematologic malignancy patients (n=19) were the majority. Compared with palliative-intent patients, curative-intent patients had significantly higher rates of chemotherapy use within 14 days of death (P=0.04), intensive care unit stay within 30 days of death (P<0.00001), and death in the intensive care unit (P=0.001). Conclusions: Cancer patients that receive curative-intent radiation in the LYOL appear to be heterogeneous and receive more aggressive care at the end of life compared with palliative-intent patients. Categorizing radiation as curative in patients with metastatic disease may reflect inappropriate decision-making among physicians. Additional studies are needed to understand how radiation oncologists categorize treatment as curative and whether prognostication models may help discriminate patients undergoing curative-intent radiation that have limited life expectancies.

Volume 43
Pages 168 - 172
DOI 10.1097/COC.0000000000000652
Language English
Journal American Journal of Clinical Oncology

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