Lien Centre for Palliative Care, Duke-NUS Medical School, 8 College Road, Singapore, 169857, Singapore.
Health Services and Systems Research, Duke-NUS Medical School, 8 College Road, Singapore, 169857, Singapore.
J Gen Intern Med. 2020 Jul;35(7):2010-2016. doi: 10.1007/s11606-020-05740-2. Epub 2020 Feb 26.
Efforts to improve quality of end-of-life (EOL) care are increasingly focused on eliciting patients' EOL preference through advance care planning (ACP). However, if patients' EOL preference changes over time and their ACP documents are not updated, these documents may no longer be valid at the time EOL decisions are made.
To assess extent and correlates of changes in stated preference for aggressive EOL care over time.
Secondary analysis of data from a randomized controlled trial of a formal ACP program versus usual care in Singapore.
Two hundred eighty-two patients with heart failure (HF) and New York Heart Association Classification III and IV symptoms were recruited and interviewed every 4 months for up to 2 years to assess their preference for EOL care. Analytic sample included 200 patients interviewed at least twice.
Nearly two thirds (64%) of patients changed their preferred type of EOL care at least once. Proportion of patients changing their stated preference for type of EOL care increased with time and the change was not unidirectional. Patients who understood their prognosis correctly were less likely to change their preference from non-aggressive to aggressive EOL care (OR 0.66, p value 0.07) or to prefer aggressive EOL care (OR 0.53; p value 0.001). On the other hand, patient-surrogate discussion of care preference was associated with a higher likelihood of change in patient preference from aggressive to non-aggressive EOL care (OR 1.83; p value 0.03).
The study provides evidence of instability in HF patients' stated EOL care preference. This undermines the value of an ACP document recorded months before EOL decisions are made unless a strategy exists for easily updating this preference.
ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02299180.
为提高临终关怀质量,目前的努力主要集中在通过预先医疗指示(ACP)来了解患者的临终关怀偏好。然而,如果患者的临终关怀偏好随时间发生变化,且他们的 ACP 文件未及时更新,那么这些文件在做出临终决策时可能已经不再有效。
评估随着时间的推移,患者对积极的临终关怀的偏好的变化程度及其相关因素。
对新加坡一项正式 ACP 方案与常规护理的随机对照试验数据的二次分析。
共招募了 282 例心力衰竭(HF)且纽约心脏协会(NYHA)分级为 III 级和 IV 级症状的患者,并在接下来的 2 年内每 4 个月对他们进行一次访谈,以评估他们对临终关怀的偏好。分析样本包括至少接受过两次访谈的 200 例患者。
近三分之二(64%)的患者至少改变过一次他们所偏好的临终关怀类型。患者改变其临终关怀偏好的比例随时间而增加,且这种变化并非单向的。正确了解自己预后的患者不太可能将其偏好从非积极的临终关怀转变为积极的临终关怀(OR 0.66,p 值 0.07),或更倾向于积极的临终关怀(OR 0.53;p 值 0.001)。另一方面,患者与代理人之间关于护理偏好的讨论与患者偏好从积极的临终关怀转变为非积极的临终关怀的可能性增加相关(OR 1.83;p 值 0.03)。
本研究为心力衰竭患者陈述的临终关怀偏好不稳定提供了证据。除非存在一种简单的更新偏好的策略,否则在做出临终决策前数月记录的 ACP 文件的价值将受到损害。
ClinicalTrials.gov:NCT02299180。