Concordant palliative care delivery in advanced head and neck cancer.
Am J Otolaryngol
; 44(1): 103675, 2023.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-36302326
OBJECTIVES: To describe the palliative care consultation practices in an academic head and neck surgery practice. METHODS: This is a retrospective review of a palliative care database and the health record for all palliative care consultations of patients suffering from advanced stage head and neck cancer within a 21-month period. RESULTS: Ten head and neck cancer patients received palliative care consults while on the otolaryngology service. One consultation occurred preoperatively; nine occurred postoperatively, on a median of hospital day 9. At the time of referral, seven patients were in the ICU and three were on a surgical floor. Code status de-escalation occurred in six patients and psycho-socio-spiritual suffering was supported in all consultations. Nine patients died within six months, with a median post-consultation survival of 35 days. Of these, two died in an ICU, five were discharged to hospice, one to a SNF, and one to a LTACH. CONCLUSION: Palliative care consultation in this advanced head and neck cancer cohort was commonly late, however, significant suffering was mitigated following most consults. Palliative care specialists are experts at eliciting patient values, determining acceptable tradeoffs and suffering limitations by employing a shared decision-making process that ends with a patient-centered value-congruent treatment recommendation. Oftentimes, this embraces curative-intent or palliative surgery, along with contingency plans for unacceptable value-incongruent postoperative outcomes. Enhanced awareness of the benefits of embracing concordant palliative care in advanced head and neck cancer patients may help overcome the significant barriers to involving palliative care experts earlier.
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Hospice Care
/
Head and Neck Neoplasms
Type of study:
Guideline
/
Observational_studies
/
Prognostic_studies
Limits:
Humans
Language:
En
Journal:
Am J Otolaryngol
Year:
2023
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
Estados Unidos
Country of publication:
Estados Unidos