Ashling Lillis, Hilary Williams, Ernie Marshall, Michael Jones, Sophie Henderson, Ollie Minton
Macmillan Cancer Support, London, UK.
Velindre Cancer Centre, Cardiff, UK.
Future Healthc J. 2025 Mar 29;12(2):100246. doi: 10.1016/j.fhj.2025.100246. eCollection 2025 Jun.
We present work funded by Macmillan Cancer Support and hosted with the UK Acute Oncology Society from conversations about acute cancer care with oncologists, palliative care and generalist clinicians to determine how best to manage the increasing complexity of cancer patients and their management.
We used a number of facilitated focus groups to draw out themes of initial management, communication differentiating between toxicity, disease progression and when and how to start conversations about the end of life.
There is an awareness of the significant mortality for patients needing acute cancer care. However, there is no clear responsibility to having these prognostic conversations. These include attitudes towards future care planning (FCP) in oncology, ownership and the challenges faced by non-oncologists treating more and more people living with cancer.
There needs to be increased recognition of acute admission as a point of transition, often into end-of-life care, for people with cancer. There are significant barriers to conversations in acute cancer care, which include a lack of clear ownership in oncology pathways, and a reticence of all professionals to engage in conversations around prognosis before acute admission or at the time of acute illness. There is a need to develop standardised links between oncology and urgent care providers and for protocols within hospital to allow for access to expertise and assessment and onward sharing of information. Earlier, more transparent conversations may allow patients and families to make clearer choices about care options in the last months of life and, critically, reduce dependence on acute care.
我们展示了由麦克米伦癌症支持组织资助、与英国急性肿瘤学会共同开展的工作,该工作源自与肿瘤学家、姑息治疗医生和全科医生就急性癌症护理进行的交流,以确定如何最好地应对癌症患者日益增加的复杂性及其管理。
我们利用了多个经过引导的焦点小组来梳理初始管理、区分毒性、疾病进展以及何时及如何开始关于生命末期话题的沟通等主题。
人们意识到需要急性癌症护理的患者存在显著的死亡率。然而,对于进行这些预后沟通并没有明确的责任划分。这些问题包括肿瘤学领域对未来护理规划(FCP)的态度、责任归属以及非肿瘤学医生在治疗越来越多癌症患者时所面临的挑战。
需要更多地认识到急性入院对于癌症患者来说往往是进入生命末期护理的一个过渡点。急性癌症护理中的沟通存在重大障碍,其中包括肿瘤学治疗路径中缺乏明确的责任归属,以及所有专业人员在急性入院前或急性疾病发生时都不愿参与关于预后的沟通。有必要在肿瘤学和紧急护理提供者之间建立标准化联系,并在医院内部制定相关规程,以便获取专业知识和进行评估以及进一步分享信息。更早、更透明的沟通可能会让患者及其家属在生命的最后几个月里对护理选择做出更清晰的决定,并且至关重要的是,减少对急性护理的依赖。