Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO.
Division of Cancer Prevention and Control, University of Colorado Cancer Center, Aurora, CO.
JCO Oncol Pract. 2023 Dec;19(12):1097-1108. doi: 10.1200/OP.23.00287. Epub 2023 Oct 13.
Providers treating adults with advanced cancer increasingly seek to engage patients and surrogates in advance care planning (ACP) and end-of-life (EOL) decision making; however, anxiety and depression may interfere with engagement. The intersection of these two key phenomena is examined among patients with metastatic cancer and their surrogates: the need to prepare for and engage in ACP and EOL decision making and the high prevalence of anxiety and depression.
Using a critical review framework, we examine the specific ways that anxiety and depression are likely to affect both ACP and EOL decision making.
The review indicates that depression is associated with reduced compliance with treatment recommendations, and high anxiety may result in avoidance of difficult discussions involved in ACP and EOL decision making. Depression and anxiety are associated with increased decisional regret in the context of cancer treatment decision making, as well as a preference for passive (not active) decision making in an intensive care unit setting. Anxiety about death in patients with advanced cancer is associated with lower rates of completion of an advance directive or discussion of EOL wishes with the oncologist. Patients with advanced cancer and elevated anxiety report higher discordance between wanted versus received life-sustaining treatments, less trust in their physicians, and less comprehension of the information communicated by their physicians.
Anxiety and depression are commonly elevated among adults with advanced cancer and health care surrogates, and can result in less engagement and satisfaction with ACP, cancer treatment, and EOL decisions. We offer practical strategies and sample scripts for oncology care providers to use to reduce the effects of anxiety and depression in these contexts.
治疗晚期癌症的医务人员越来越希望患者及其代理人参与预先医疗护理计划(ACP)和临终决策制定;然而,焦虑和抑郁可能会干扰参与度。本研究旨在探讨转移性癌症患者及其代理人的这两个关键现象的交集:即需要为 ACP 和 EOL 决策制定做准备并参与其中,以及焦虑和抑郁的高发病率。
我们采用批判性审查框架,审查焦虑和抑郁可能影响 ACP 和 EOL 决策制定的具体方式。
综述表明,抑郁与治疗建议的遵从性降低有关,而高度焦虑可能导致回避 ACP 和 EOL 决策制定中涉及的困难讨论。抑郁和焦虑与癌症治疗决策中增加决策后悔以及在重症监护病房环境中选择被动(而非主动)决策有关。晚期癌症患者对死亡的焦虑与完成预先指示或与肿瘤医生讨论 EOL 意愿的比率较低有关。焦虑程度较高的晚期癌症患者表示,希望接受的与实际接受的维持生命的治疗之间存在较大差异,对医生的信任度较低,对医生传达的信息的理解也较差。
焦虑和抑郁在晚期癌症患者及其医疗代理人中较为常见,可能导致 ACP、癌症治疗和 EOL 决策的参与度和满意度降低。我们提供了针对肿瘤护理提供者的实用策略和示例脚本,以减轻这些情况下焦虑和抑郁的影响。