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Survival trends in palliative care patients with cancer: A Mayo Clinic 5-year review.

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Sub-category:
Palliative Care

Category:
Patient Care

Meeting:
2009 ASCO Annual Meeting

Session Type and Session Title:
General Poster Session, Patient and Survivor Care

Abstract No:
9592

Citation:
J Clin Oncol 27:15s, 2009 (suppl; abstr 9592)

Author(s):
A. H. Kamal, K. M. Swetz, H. Liu, S. R. Ruegg, E. C. Carey, K. Whitford, F. A. Bock, E. T. Creagan, T. J. Moynihan, J. S. Kaur; Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN

Abstract:

Background: Palliative care (PC) is an essential part of the continuum of care for cancer (CA) patients (pts). Little is known about the aggregate characteristics and survival of pts receiving inpatient palliative care consultation (PCC). Methods: We reviewed data prospectively collected on patients seen by the Palliative Care Inpatient Consult Service at Mayo Clinic - Rochester from 2003-2008. Demographics, consult characteristics, and survival were analyzed. Kaplan-Meier survival curves and a Cox model of survival were produced. Results: 1794 total patients were seen over the five year period. Cancer is the most common primary diagnosis (47%). Growth in annual PCC has risen dramatically (113 in 2003 vs. 414 in 2007) despite stable total hospital admissions. Patient are predominantly men (52% vs. 48%, p=0.02); median age is 76. General medicine, medical cardiology, and medical intensive care unit services refer most often. Most frequent issues addressed are goals of care, dismissal planning, and pain control (29%, 19%, 17%). PCC in actively dying pts have increased with 27% of all non-operating room, non-trauma in-hospital deaths being seen. Although CA pts have the highest median survival after PCC vs. other diagnoses (17 days, p = 0.018), we observed a five-year trend of decreasing survival from admission to death and PCC to death. Median time from admission to death in CA pts is 36 days in 2003 and 19 days in 2008 (p<0.01). Median time from PCC to death is 33 versus 11.5 days (p<0.01). Despite this, median hospital length of stay and time from PCC to discharge have remained fixed at 8 and 2.5 days, respectively. A Cox model of survival to discharge and <6 months survival (hospice eligibility) shows hospital length of stay, time from consult to discharge, and dismissal location from hospital are all prognostic factors. Conclusions: Survival window for PC intervention for CA pts is lessening. With the trend of shorter survival after PCC, PC professionals have little over two days to implement a comprehensive, ongoing care plan. This highlights the importance of earlier outpatient palliative care involvement with advanced cancer patients and families.


Abstract Disclosures

Faculty and Discussant Disclosures

Annual Meeting Planning Committee Disclosures

2009 Annual Meeting Proceedings Part I Errata

Abstracts that were granted an exception in accordance with ASCO's Conflict of Interest Policy and are designated with a caret symbol (^) here and in the print version.


  Associated Presentation(s):

    

1. Survival trends in palliative care patients with cancer: A Mayo Clinic 5-year review.

Meeting: 2009 ASCO Annual Meeting
Presenter: Arif Hossain Kamal, MD
Session: Patient and Survivor Care (General Poster Session)


  Other Abstracts in this Sub-Category:

    

1. Illness understanding in patients with advanced lung cancer.

Meeting: 2009 ASCO Annual Meeting   Abstract No: 9515   First Author: J. S. Temel
Category: Patient Care - Palliative Care

    

2. Randomized trial of short-course versus long-course radiotherapy for palliation of painful vertebral bone metastases: A retrospective analysis of RTOG 97-14.

Meeting: 2009 ASCO Annual Meeting   Abstract No: 9521   First Author: D. D. Howell
Category: Patient Care - Palliative Care

    

3. Final results of a study comparing short-course and long-course radiotherapy (RT) for local control of metastatic spinal cord compression (MSCC).

Meeting: 2009 ASCO Annual Meeting   Abstract No: 9522   First Author: D. Rades
Category: Patient Care - Palliative Care

    

More...


  Abstracts by A. H. Kamal:

    

1. Survival trends in palliative care patients with cancer: A Mayo Clinic 5-year review.

Meeting: 2009 ASCO Annual Meeting   Abstract No: 9592   First Author: A. H. Kamal
Category: Patient Care - Palliative Care

    

2. How well do standard prognostic criteria predict oncotype DX (ODX) scores?

Meeting: 2007 ASCO Annual Meeting   Abstract No: 576   First Author: A. H. Kamal
Category: Breast Cancer--Local-Regional and Adjuvant Therapy - Adjuvant Therapy

    

More...


  Presentations by A. H. Kamal:

    

1. Survival trends in palliative care patients with cancer: A Mayo Clinic 5-year review.

Meeting: 2009 ASCO Annual Meeting
Presenter: Arif Hossain Kamal, MD
Session: Patient and Survivor Care (General Poster Session)

    

2. How well do standard prognostic criteria predict oncotype DX (ODX) scores?

Meeting: 2007 ASCO Annual Meeting
Presenter: Arif Hossain Kamal, MD
Session: Breast Cancer - Local-Regional and Adjuvant Therapy (General Poster Session)

    

More...


  Educational Book Manuscripts by A. H. Kamal:

    

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