Center for Research on End-of-Life Care, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, USA; Division of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
Division of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, USA.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2018 Aug;56(2):259-263. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2018.04.016. Epub 2018 May 10.
Patients with advanced cancer often overestimate their time left to live. Those who have heightened awareness of their cognitive and physical deficits at the end of life may have a better prognostic understanding.
We sought to investigate the extent to which patients' self-reports of physical well-being and cognitive function were associated with prognostic understanding.
Logistic regression analyzed data from Coping with Cancer II, a National Cancer Institute-funded study of patients with advanced cancer from nine U.S. cancer clinics. Patients with metastatic cancers who had an oncologist-estimated life expectancy of less than six months and did not have significant cognitive impairment were eligible (N = 300). Trained interviewers administered subsets of the McGill Quality of Life and the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Cognition, Version 2, to measure physical well-being and cognitive complaints. There were four dichotomous outcomes: acknowledgment of their terminal illness; understanding that their diagnosis was late or end stage; belief that life expectancy was months, not years; and prognostic understanding, which was defined as accurate responses to all three questions. Covariates included age and gender.
Worse patient-reported physical well-being and cognitive function were independently associated with the patient's acknowledgment of his and/or her terminal illness (adjusted odds ratio 0.91; 95% CI = 0.82, 1.00; P = 0.047 and adjusted odds ratio 1.73; 95% CI = 1.17, 2.55; P = 0.006, respectively).
Patients who reported worse cognitive function and physical well-being were more aware of their terminal illness than those with better cognitive function.
晚期癌症患者常常高估自己剩余的生存时间。那些在生命末期对自己认知和身体缺陷有更高认识的人可能对预后有更好的理解。
我们试图调查患者对自身身体状况和认知功能的自我报告在多大程度上与预后理解相关。
逻辑回归分析了美国九家癌症诊所的晚期癌症患者的“应对癌症 II”研究的数据。符合条件的患者为:患有转移性癌症,肿瘤医生预计生存期不到六个月且没有明显认知障碍;癌症患者报告有认知功能障碍,身体状况差。合格患者(N=300)接受了 McGill 生活质量和功能性评估癌症治疗认知测试 2 版的子集评估,以测量身体状况和认知症状。有四个二分变量结果:承认患有绝症;理解他们的诊断是晚期或终末期;认为预期寿命是几个月而不是几年;以及预后理解,定义为对所有三个问题的准确回答。协变量包括年龄和性别。
患者报告的身体状况和认知功能越差,他们对自己和/或其绝症的承认独立相关(调整后的优势比 0.91;95%置信区间为 0.82,1.00;P=0.047 和调整后的优势比 1.73;95%置信区间为 1.17,2.55;P=0.006)。
报告认知功能和身体状况较差的患者比认知功能较好的患者更意识到自己的绝症。