Department of Biobehavioral Nursing Science and Center for Palliative Care Research and Education, College of Nursing, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Department of Family, Community and Health System Science and Center for Palliative Care Research and Education, College of Nursing, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
J Geriatr Oncol. 2021 Sep;12(7):1068-1075. doi: 10.1016/j.jgo.2021.04.008. Epub 2021 May 7.
Age group differences have been reported for pain and symptom presentations in outpatient and inpatient oncology settings, but it is unknown if these differences occur in hospice. We examined whether there were differences in pain, symptom distress, pain barriers, and comorbidities among three age groups (20-64 years, 65-84 years, and 85+) of hospice patients with cancer.
Participants were recruited from two hospices. Half were women; 49% White and 34% Black. 42% were 20-64 y, 43% 65-84 y, and 15% 85+ y. We analyzed baseline data for 230 hospice patients with cancer (enrolled 2014-2016, mean age 68.2 ± 14.0, 20-100 years) from a stepped-wedge randomized controlled trial. Measures were the Average pain intensity (API, 0-10: current, least and worst pain intensity during the past 24 h), Symptom Distress Scale (SDS, 13-65), Barriers Questionnaire-13 (BQ-13, 0-5), and comorbid conditions. Descriptive, bivariate association, and multiple regression analyses were performed.
Mean API scores differed (p < .001) among the three age groups (5.6 ± 2.0 [20-64 years], 4.7 ± 2.0 [65-84 years], and 4.4 ± 1.8 [85+], as did the mean SDS scores (36.1 ± 7.3, 33.5 ± 8.1, and 31.6 ± 6.6, p = .004). BQ-13 mean scores (2.6 ± 0.9, 2.7 ± 0.8, and 2.5 ± 0.7) and comorbidities were not significantly different across age groups. In multiple regression analyses, age-related differences in API and SDS remained significant after adjusting for gender, race, cancer, palliative performance score, and comorbidities. Comorbidities were positively associated with SDS (p = .046) but not with API (p = .64) in the regression model.
Older hospice patients with cancer reported less pain and symptoms than younger patients, but all groups reported similar barriers to pain management. These findings suggest the need for age- and race-sensitive interventions to reduce pain and symptom distress levels at life's end.
在门诊和住院肿瘤治疗环境中,已经有研究报道了年龄组之间在疼痛和症状表现方面的差异,但尚不清楚这些差异是否存在于临终关怀中。我们研究了癌症临终关怀患者的三个年龄组(20-64 岁、65-84 岁和 85 岁以上)之间的疼痛、症状困扰、疼痛障碍和合并症是否存在差异。
参与者是从两家临终关怀机构招募的。他们中有一半是女性;49%是白人,34%是黑人。42%的参与者年龄在 20-64 岁之间,43%的参与者年龄在 65-84 岁之间,15%的参与者年龄在 85 岁以上。我们分析了一项来自于一项递进式随机对照试验的 230 名癌症临终关怀患者(2014-2016 年入组,平均年龄 68.2±14.0 岁,年龄 20-100 岁)的基线数据。测量指标包括平均疼痛强度(API,0-10:当前、过去 24 小时内最痛和最痛时的疼痛强度)、症状困扰量表(SDS,13-65)、障碍问卷-13(BQ-13,0-5)和合并症。进行了描述性、双变量关联和多元回归分析。
三个年龄组的平均 API 评分存在差异(p<0.001)(20-64 岁为 5.6±2.0,65-84 岁为 4.7±2.0,85 岁以上为 4.4±1.8),SDS 评分也存在差异(p=0.004)(36.1±7.3、33.5±8.1 和 31.6±6.6)。BQ-13 的平均评分(2.6±0.9、2.7±0.8 和 2.5±0.7)和合并症在年龄组之间没有显著差异。在多元回归分析中,在调整了性别、种族、癌症、姑息治疗表现评分和合并症后,API 和 SDS 的年龄相关差异仍然显著。合并症与 SDS 呈正相关(p=0.046),但与 API 无关(p=0.64)。
老年癌症临终关怀患者报告的疼痛和症状比年轻患者少,但所有患者都报告了类似的疼痛管理障碍。这些发现表明,需要进行针对年龄和种族的敏感干预,以降低生命末期的疼痛和症状困扰水平。