Surgical Treatment Intensity at the End of Life in Patients With Cancer: A Systematic Review.

Samuel Lawday, Benjamin E Zucker, Shona Gardner, James Robb, Lorna Leandro, William Hollingworth, Jane Blazeby, Angus G K McNair, Charlotte Chamberlain
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Abstract

Objective: To synthesize evidence of surgical treatment intensity, defined as a measure of the quantity of invasive procedures, received by patients in patients with cancer within a defined time period around the 'end of life' (EoL).

Background: Concern regarding overly 'aggressive' care or high health care utilization at the EoL, particularly in cancer, is growing. The contribution surgery makes to the quality and cost of EoL care in cancer has not yet been quantified.

Methods: This PROSPERO registered systematic review used PRIMSA guidelines to search electronic databases for observational studies detailing surgical intensity at the EoL in adult cancer patients. Intensity was compared by disease, individual characteristics, geographical region, and palliative care involvement. A risk of bias tool assessed quality and a narrative synthesis of findings was completed.

Results: In total, 39 papers were identified in this search. Up to 79% of patients underwent invasive procedures in the last month of life. Heterogeneity in patient groups, inclusion criteria, and EoL time periods lead to huge variation in results, with treatment intention often not identified. Patient, geographical, and pathological factors, alongside involvement of palliative/hospice care, were all identified as contributors to treatment intensity variation.

Conclusions: A significant proportion of patients with cancer undergo invasive and costly invasive procedures at the EoL. There is significant reporting heterogeneity, with variation in patient inclusion criteria and EoL timeframes, demonstrating uncertainty within the literature. Identification of the context where surgical treatment intensity at the EoL is potentially inappropriate is not currently possible.

Abstract Image

癌症患者临终时的手术治疗强度:一项系统综述。
目的:综合手术治疗强度的证据,定义为癌症患者在“生命终结”(EoL)的规定时间内接受的侵入性手术数量的衡量标准。背景:对EoL过度“积极”治疗或高医疗保健使用率的担忧正在增加,特别是在癌症方面。手术对肿瘤EoL护理质量和成本的贡献尚未被量化。方法:这项在PROSPERO注册的系统评价使用PRIMSA指南搜索电子数据库,以获得详细描述成年癌症患者EoL手术强度的观察性研究。强度根据疾病、个体特征、地理区域和参与姑息治疗进行比较。使用偏倚风险工具评估质量,并完成对结果的叙述性综合。结果:共检索到39篇论文。高达79%的患者在生命的最后一个月接受了侵入性手术。患者组、纳入标准和EoL时间段的异质性导致结果的巨大差异,治疗意图往往无法确定。患者、地理和病理因素,以及是否参与缓和/安宁疗护,都被确定为影响治疗强度变化的因素。结论:相当比例的癌症患者在EoL接受侵入性和昂贵的侵入性手术。报告存在显著的异质性,患者纳入标准和EoL时间框架存在差异,表明文献中的不确定性。目前还不可能确定EoL的手术治疗强度是否可能不合适。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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