Division of Quality of Life and Palliative Care, Department of Oncology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, USA.
Division of Pediatric Palliative Care, Children's Hospital and Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska, USA.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2021 May;61(5):1060-1079.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2020.12.003. Epub 2020 Dec 24.
Children with cancer and their families have complex needs related to symptoms, decision-making, care planning, and psychosocial impact extending across the illness trajectory, which for some includes end of life. Whether specialty pediatric palliative care (SPPC) is associated with improved outcomes for children with cancer and their families is unknown.
We conducted a systematic review following PRISMA guidelines to investigate outcomes associated with SPPC in pediatric oncology with a focus on intervention delivery, collaboration, and alignment with National Quality Forum domains.
We searched PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, and CINAHL databases from inception until April 2020 and reviewed references manually. Eligible articles were published in English, involved pediatric patients aged 0-18 years with cancer, and contained original data regarding patient and family illness and end-of-life experiences, including symptom management, communication, decision-making, quality of life, satisfaction, and healthcare utilization.
We screened 6682 article abstracts and 82 full-text articles; 32 studies met inclusion criteria, representing 15,635 unique children with cancer and 342 parents. Generally, children with cancer who received SPPC had improved symptom burden, pain control, and quality of life with decreased intensive procedures, increased completion of advance care planning and resuscitation status documentation, and fewer end-of-life intensive care stays with higher likelihood of dying at home. Family impact included satisfaction with SPPC and perception of improved communication.
SPPC may improve illness experiences for children with cancer and their families. Multisite studies utilizing comparative effectiveness approaches and validated metrics may support further advancement of the field.
患有癌症的儿童及其家庭在症状、决策、护理计划以及贯穿整个疾病过程的心理社会影响方面存在复杂的需求,其中一些还包括临终关怀。专门的儿科姑息治疗(SPPC)是否能改善癌症儿童及其家庭的预后尚不清楚。
我们按照 PRISMA 指南进行了系统评价,旨在调查儿科肿瘤学中 SPPC 相关的结局,重点关注干预措施的提供、协作以及与国家质量论坛领域的一致性。
我们检索了 PubMed、Embase、Scopus、Web of Science 和 CINAHL 数据库,时间从建库至 2020 年 4 月,并手动审查了参考文献。符合条件的文章发表于英文期刊,涉及年龄在 0-18 岁的癌症患儿,且包含关于患者及其家庭疾病和临终经历的原始数据,包括症状管理、沟通、决策、生活质量、满意度和医疗保健利用。
我们筛选了 6682 篇文章摘要和 82 篇全文,32 项研究符合纳入标准,代表了 15635 名患有癌症的独特儿童和 342 名家长。一般来说,接受 SPPC 的癌症儿童的症状负担、疼痛控制和生活质量得到改善,重症治疗程序减少,预先护理计划和复苏状态文件的完成度增加,临终关怀重症监护病房的入住率降低,且更有可能在家中去世。家庭影响包括对 SPPC 的满意度和对沟通改善的认知。
SPPC 可能改善癌症儿童及其家庭的疾病体验。采用比较效果学方法和验证指标的多中心研究可能会进一步推动该领域的发展。