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Palliative care at time of cancer diagnosis improves survival

CHICAGO – Early palliative care delivered almost exclusively by telephone improved survival among patients with advanced cancer in the ENABLE III study.

After a median follow-up of a little more than 1 year, 46% of patients receiving palliative care from the time of cancer diagnosis and 54% of those with delayed palliative care had died.

Dr. Marie Bakitas

Overall median survival was 18.3 months for the immediate group and 11.9 months for the delayed group (P = .17).

In preplanned analyses, the risk of death at 1 year was significantly lower in the immediate group (hazard ratio 0.72; P = .003), with a catch-up effect thereafter, Marie Bakitas, DNSc, reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

"Enhanced medical care, reduced aggressive care and chemotherapy use, longer access to hospice, and biologic impacts of improved quality of life have all been proposed as mechanisms to explain this survival advantage," Dr. Bakitas said. "However, at the present time, we do not have the data to support a particular mechanism and we are actively exploring this question through secondary analyses."

ENABLE (Educate, Nurture, Advise, Before Life Ends) III is the first study to examine the timing of early palliative care, but not the first to identify a survival advantage.

A recent study (N. Engl. J. Med. 2010:363:733-42) found that patients with metastatic non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who received palliative care at the time of randomization lived a significant 2.7 months longer than did those receiving standard oncologic care, despite receiving significantly less aggressive end-of-life care (33% vs. 54%).

In ENABLE III, 207 patients with advanced cancer, and their caregivers, were randomized as a dyad to begin usual cancer care plus the intervention at the time of diagnosis (immediate group) or usual care alone for 3 months followed by the intervention (delayed group).

The intervention consisted of a traditional outpatient palliative care consult and six weekly structured telephone calls with a nurse coach using a guidebook that covers such topics as problem solving, symptom management, communication, and advanced care planning, explained Dr. Bakitas, the Marie O’Koren Endowed Chair and Professor, School of Nursing, and associate director of the Center for Palliative and Supportive Care, University of Alabama, Birmingham.

Usual care included the clinical consult, but not the telephone intervention.

The participants’ mean age was 64 years, half were male, 60% lived in a rural area, and 65% were married or living with a partner. Lung cancer was the most common diagnosis at 42%.

At baseline, 75% of patients were receiving chemotherapy, 19% were undergoing radiation, and 43% had an advanced directive completed at diagnosis.

Unlike the group’s prior trial comparing palliative care to usual care at 3 months, immediate versus delayed palliative care did not lead to significant improvements in quality of life on the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Palliative care scale (129.9 vs. 127.2; P = .34), mood on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale (11.2 vs. 10.8; P = .33), or symptom impact on the Quality of Life at the End of Life symptom impact subscale (11.4 vs. 12.2; P = .09).

One plausible reason for the findings is that there may not have been enough care differences between the two groups, with 40% of the delayed group receiving their first palliative care contact an average of 30 days before they were scheduled to do so on day 84, Dr. Bakitas said.

Second, difficulties in accrual and decreased study power may have made it difficult to pick up between-group differences on the subjective instruments, resulting in a type 2 error.

"A 3-month delay is still very early," Dr. Bakitas said.

She noted that early intervention allowed the palliative care team to have contact with patients for 1 year on average (range 240-493 days), compared with a median of 41-90 days from referral to death reported for outpatient clinics in a national survey of 142 National Cancer Institute and non-NCI cancer centers (JAMA 2010;303:1054-61).

Resource and chemotherapy use in ENABLE III was also comparable in both groups. Decedents in the immediate and delayed groups spent a median of 5 and 6 days, respectively, in hospital in the 7-9 months preceding death, while 8% and 5% received chemotherapy in the last 2 weeks of life.

This compares favorably with a national average of more than 8 hospital days in the last 6 months of life observed in the 2014 Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, and a chemotherapy rate of 17.5% reported in the previously noted NSCLC study, Dr. Bakitas said.

 

 

She called for more studies of early palliative care to determine the optimal timing, personnel, essential elements, and mechanisms of improved survival.

"While the benefits of these approaches have been demonstrated when provided early after a cancer diagnosis, in practice these potentially beneficial palliative care services are often provided very late, sometimes hours or weeks before death," Dr. Bakitas said. "This trend is likely to continue in the absence of clear direction on the very pragmatic questions of who, what, and when."

The study was funded by National Institute for Nursing Research. Dr. Bakitas reported having no relevant disclosures.

Palliative care support buoys caregivers of advanced cancer patients

Providing early palliative care support to caregivers of advanced cancer patients improves their quality of life, depression, and stress burden, the ENABLE III study found.

"Similar to patients, waiting to provide these caregiver services until patients are in their last weeks to days of life may not adequately address the distress that they experience," Nick Dionne-Odom, Ph.D., RN, said at the meeting.

Caregivers for the 13 million cancer patients in the United States living with advanced disease can spend up to 8 hours per day providing assistance in activities that include symptom management, emotional and spiritual support, meal preparation, arranging medical appointments, and transportation.

The combination of this burden and witnessing someone close to you struggle with illness can cause psychological distress equal to or sometimes greater than that experienced by the patient, said Dr. Dionne-Odom, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

In ENABLE III, 122 caregivers were randomized at the time of the patient’s cancer diagnosis or 12 weeks later to a palliative care intervention that consisted of three weekly structured educational telephone calls from an advanced practice nurse coach, monthly check-in calls to address new or ongoing issues, and a bereavement call for caregivers whose loved ones died.

Caregivers were not restricted to family members, but could include close friends and even neighbors. Their mean age was 60 years, 79% were female, 75% were spouses, and all had at least a high school education.

At 12 weeks from the start of the intervention, caregivers in the immediate versus delayed group had significantly better quality of life on the Caregiver Quality of Life Index–Cancer scale (mean 50.2 vs. 56.1; P = .02) and less depressive symptoms on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CESD) scale (10.2 vs. 16.6; P = .0006), Dr. Dionne-Odom said. Notably, the delayed group surpassed the clinical cutoff for depression of 16 on the CESD scale, he added.

The intervention did not appear to change the perception among caregivers of what was demanded of them by the patient or their objective burden, though there was a trend among the immediate group for improved caregiver stress burden on the Montgomery Borgatta Caregiver Burden Scale (13.2 vs. 13.8; P = .10).

There was no significant difference between groups in depression or grief scores for caregivers of decedents. A difference may have been detected with a larger sample size, he said, adding that prior studies have shown that reducing caregiver stress before patients’ death is associated with better bereavement adjustment.

As for why caregivers appear to benefit more than the patients from the parallel palliative care interventions, Dr. Bakitas said in an interview it may be the timing of the assessments, adding that other studies have shown an impact of palliative care at 4 months, but not at 3 months.

pwendling@frontlinemedcom.com

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CHICAGO – Early palliative care delivered almost exclusively by telephone improved survival among patients with advanced cancer in the ENABLE III study.

After a median follow-up of a little more than 1 year, 46% of patients receiving palliative care from the time of cancer diagnosis and 54% of those with delayed palliative care had died.

Dr. Marie Bakitas

Overall median survival was 18.3 months for the immediate group and 11.9 months for the delayed group (P = .17).

In preplanned analyses, the risk of death at 1 year was significantly lower in the immediate group (hazard ratio 0.72; P = .003), with a catch-up effect thereafter, Marie Bakitas, DNSc, reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

"Enhanced medical care, reduced aggressive care and chemotherapy use, longer access to hospice, and biologic impacts of improved quality of life have all been proposed as mechanisms to explain this survival advantage," Dr. Bakitas said. "However, at the present time, we do not have the data to support a particular mechanism and we are actively exploring this question through secondary analyses."

ENABLE (Educate, Nurture, Advise, Before Life Ends) III is the first study to examine the timing of early palliative care, but not the first to identify a survival advantage.

A recent study (N. Engl. J. Med. 2010:363:733-42) found that patients with metastatic non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who received palliative care at the time of randomization lived a significant 2.7 months longer than did those receiving standard oncologic care, despite receiving significantly less aggressive end-of-life care (33% vs. 54%).

In ENABLE III, 207 patients with advanced cancer, and their caregivers, were randomized as a dyad to begin usual cancer care plus the intervention at the time of diagnosis (immediate group) or usual care alone for 3 months followed by the intervention (delayed group).

The intervention consisted of a traditional outpatient palliative care consult and six weekly structured telephone calls with a nurse coach using a guidebook that covers such topics as problem solving, symptom management, communication, and advanced care planning, explained Dr. Bakitas, the Marie O’Koren Endowed Chair and Professor, School of Nursing, and associate director of the Center for Palliative and Supportive Care, University of Alabama, Birmingham.

Usual care included the clinical consult, but not the telephone intervention.

The participants’ mean age was 64 years, half were male, 60% lived in a rural area, and 65% were married or living with a partner. Lung cancer was the most common diagnosis at 42%.

At baseline, 75% of patients were receiving chemotherapy, 19% were undergoing radiation, and 43% had an advanced directive completed at diagnosis.

Unlike the group’s prior trial comparing palliative care to usual care at 3 months, immediate versus delayed palliative care did not lead to significant improvements in quality of life on the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Palliative care scale (129.9 vs. 127.2; P = .34), mood on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale (11.2 vs. 10.8; P = .33), or symptom impact on the Quality of Life at the End of Life symptom impact subscale (11.4 vs. 12.2; P = .09).

One plausible reason for the findings is that there may not have been enough care differences between the two groups, with 40% of the delayed group receiving their first palliative care contact an average of 30 days before they were scheduled to do so on day 84, Dr. Bakitas said.

Second, difficulties in accrual and decreased study power may have made it difficult to pick up between-group differences on the subjective instruments, resulting in a type 2 error.

"A 3-month delay is still very early," Dr. Bakitas said.

She noted that early intervention allowed the palliative care team to have contact with patients for 1 year on average (range 240-493 days), compared with a median of 41-90 days from referral to death reported for outpatient clinics in a national survey of 142 National Cancer Institute and non-NCI cancer centers (JAMA 2010;303:1054-61).

Resource and chemotherapy use in ENABLE III was also comparable in both groups. Decedents in the immediate and delayed groups spent a median of 5 and 6 days, respectively, in hospital in the 7-9 months preceding death, while 8% and 5% received chemotherapy in the last 2 weeks of life.

This compares favorably with a national average of more than 8 hospital days in the last 6 months of life observed in the 2014 Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, and a chemotherapy rate of 17.5% reported in the previously noted NSCLC study, Dr. Bakitas said.

 

 

She called for more studies of early palliative care to determine the optimal timing, personnel, essential elements, and mechanisms of improved survival.

"While the benefits of these approaches have been demonstrated when provided early after a cancer diagnosis, in practice these potentially beneficial palliative care services are often provided very late, sometimes hours or weeks before death," Dr. Bakitas said. "This trend is likely to continue in the absence of clear direction on the very pragmatic questions of who, what, and when."

The study was funded by National Institute for Nursing Research. Dr. Bakitas reported having no relevant disclosures.

Palliative care support buoys caregivers of advanced cancer patients

Providing early palliative care support to caregivers of advanced cancer patients improves their quality of life, depression, and stress burden, the ENABLE III study found.

"Similar to patients, waiting to provide these caregiver services until patients are in their last weeks to days of life may not adequately address the distress that they experience," Nick Dionne-Odom, Ph.D., RN, said at the meeting.

Caregivers for the 13 million cancer patients in the United States living with advanced disease can spend up to 8 hours per day providing assistance in activities that include symptom management, emotional and spiritual support, meal preparation, arranging medical appointments, and transportation.

The combination of this burden and witnessing someone close to you struggle with illness can cause psychological distress equal to or sometimes greater than that experienced by the patient, said Dr. Dionne-Odom, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

In ENABLE III, 122 caregivers were randomized at the time of the patient’s cancer diagnosis or 12 weeks later to a palliative care intervention that consisted of three weekly structured educational telephone calls from an advanced practice nurse coach, monthly check-in calls to address new or ongoing issues, and a bereavement call for caregivers whose loved ones died.

Caregivers were not restricted to family members, but could include close friends and even neighbors. Their mean age was 60 years, 79% were female, 75% were spouses, and all had at least a high school education.

At 12 weeks from the start of the intervention, caregivers in the immediate versus delayed group had significantly better quality of life on the Caregiver Quality of Life Index–Cancer scale (mean 50.2 vs. 56.1; P = .02) and less depressive symptoms on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CESD) scale (10.2 vs. 16.6; P = .0006), Dr. Dionne-Odom said. Notably, the delayed group surpassed the clinical cutoff for depression of 16 on the CESD scale, he added.

The intervention did not appear to change the perception among caregivers of what was demanded of them by the patient or their objective burden, though there was a trend among the immediate group for improved caregiver stress burden on the Montgomery Borgatta Caregiver Burden Scale (13.2 vs. 13.8; P = .10).

There was no significant difference between groups in depression or grief scores for caregivers of decedents. A difference may have been detected with a larger sample size, he said, adding that prior studies have shown that reducing caregiver stress before patients’ death is associated with better bereavement adjustment.

As for why caregivers appear to benefit more than the patients from the parallel palliative care interventions, Dr. Bakitas said in an interview it may be the timing of the assessments, adding that other studies have shown an impact of palliative care at 4 months, but not at 3 months.

pwendling@frontlinemedcom.com

CHICAGO – Early palliative care delivered almost exclusively by telephone improved survival among patients with advanced cancer in the ENABLE III study.

After a median follow-up of a little more than 1 year, 46% of patients receiving palliative care from the time of cancer diagnosis and 54% of those with delayed palliative care had died.

Dr. Marie Bakitas

Overall median survival was 18.3 months for the immediate group and 11.9 months for the delayed group (P = .17).

In preplanned analyses, the risk of death at 1 year was significantly lower in the immediate group (hazard ratio 0.72; P = .003), with a catch-up effect thereafter, Marie Bakitas, DNSc, reported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

"Enhanced medical care, reduced aggressive care and chemotherapy use, longer access to hospice, and biologic impacts of improved quality of life have all been proposed as mechanisms to explain this survival advantage," Dr. Bakitas said. "However, at the present time, we do not have the data to support a particular mechanism and we are actively exploring this question through secondary analyses."

ENABLE (Educate, Nurture, Advise, Before Life Ends) III is the first study to examine the timing of early palliative care, but not the first to identify a survival advantage.

A recent study (N. Engl. J. Med. 2010:363:733-42) found that patients with metastatic non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who received palliative care at the time of randomization lived a significant 2.7 months longer than did those receiving standard oncologic care, despite receiving significantly less aggressive end-of-life care (33% vs. 54%).

In ENABLE III, 207 patients with advanced cancer, and their caregivers, were randomized as a dyad to begin usual cancer care plus the intervention at the time of diagnosis (immediate group) or usual care alone for 3 months followed by the intervention (delayed group).

The intervention consisted of a traditional outpatient palliative care consult and six weekly structured telephone calls with a nurse coach using a guidebook that covers such topics as problem solving, symptom management, communication, and advanced care planning, explained Dr. Bakitas, the Marie O’Koren Endowed Chair and Professor, School of Nursing, and associate director of the Center for Palliative and Supportive Care, University of Alabama, Birmingham.

Usual care included the clinical consult, but not the telephone intervention.

The participants’ mean age was 64 years, half were male, 60% lived in a rural area, and 65% were married or living with a partner. Lung cancer was the most common diagnosis at 42%.

At baseline, 75% of patients were receiving chemotherapy, 19% were undergoing radiation, and 43% had an advanced directive completed at diagnosis.

Unlike the group’s prior trial comparing palliative care to usual care at 3 months, immediate versus delayed palliative care did not lead to significant improvements in quality of life on the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Palliative care scale (129.9 vs. 127.2; P = .34), mood on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale (11.2 vs. 10.8; P = .33), or symptom impact on the Quality of Life at the End of Life symptom impact subscale (11.4 vs. 12.2; P = .09).

One plausible reason for the findings is that there may not have been enough care differences between the two groups, with 40% of the delayed group receiving their first palliative care contact an average of 30 days before they were scheduled to do so on day 84, Dr. Bakitas said.

Second, difficulties in accrual and decreased study power may have made it difficult to pick up between-group differences on the subjective instruments, resulting in a type 2 error.

"A 3-month delay is still very early," Dr. Bakitas said.

She noted that early intervention allowed the palliative care team to have contact with patients for 1 year on average (range 240-493 days), compared with a median of 41-90 days from referral to death reported for outpatient clinics in a national survey of 142 National Cancer Institute and non-NCI cancer centers (JAMA 2010;303:1054-61).

Resource and chemotherapy use in ENABLE III was also comparable in both groups. Decedents in the immediate and delayed groups spent a median of 5 and 6 days, respectively, in hospital in the 7-9 months preceding death, while 8% and 5% received chemotherapy in the last 2 weeks of life.

This compares favorably with a national average of more than 8 hospital days in the last 6 months of life observed in the 2014 Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, and a chemotherapy rate of 17.5% reported in the previously noted NSCLC study, Dr. Bakitas said.

 

 

She called for more studies of early palliative care to determine the optimal timing, personnel, essential elements, and mechanisms of improved survival.

"While the benefits of these approaches have been demonstrated when provided early after a cancer diagnosis, in practice these potentially beneficial palliative care services are often provided very late, sometimes hours or weeks before death," Dr. Bakitas said. "This trend is likely to continue in the absence of clear direction on the very pragmatic questions of who, what, and when."

The study was funded by National Institute for Nursing Research. Dr. Bakitas reported having no relevant disclosures.

Palliative care support buoys caregivers of advanced cancer patients

Providing early palliative care support to caregivers of advanced cancer patients improves their quality of life, depression, and stress burden, the ENABLE III study found.

"Similar to patients, waiting to provide these caregiver services until patients are in their last weeks to days of life may not adequately address the distress that they experience," Nick Dionne-Odom, Ph.D., RN, said at the meeting.

Caregivers for the 13 million cancer patients in the United States living with advanced disease can spend up to 8 hours per day providing assistance in activities that include symptom management, emotional and spiritual support, meal preparation, arranging medical appointments, and transportation.

The combination of this burden and witnessing someone close to you struggle with illness can cause psychological distress equal to or sometimes greater than that experienced by the patient, said Dr. Dionne-Odom, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

In ENABLE III, 122 caregivers were randomized at the time of the patient’s cancer diagnosis or 12 weeks later to a palliative care intervention that consisted of three weekly structured educational telephone calls from an advanced practice nurse coach, monthly check-in calls to address new or ongoing issues, and a bereavement call for caregivers whose loved ones died.

Caregivers were not restricted to family members, but could include close friends and even neighbors. Their mean age was 60 years, 79% were female, 75% were spouses, and all had at least a high school education.

At 12 weeks from the start of the intervention, caregivers in the immediate versus delayed group had significantly better quality of life on the Caregiver Quality of Life Index–Cancer scale (mean 50.2 vs. 56.1; P = .02) and less depressive symptoms on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CESD) scale (10.2 vs. 16.6; P = .0006), Dr. Dionne-Odom said. Notably, the delayed group surpassed the clinical cutoff for depression of 16 on the CESD scale, he added.

The intervention did not appear to change the perception among caregivers of what was demanded of them by the patient or their objective burden, though there was a trend among the immediate group for improved caregiver stress burden on the Montgomery Borgatta Caregiver Burden Scale (13.2 vs. 13.8; P = .10).

There was no significant difference between groups in depression or grief scores for caregivers of decedents. A difference may have been detected with a larger sample size, he said, adding that prior studies have shown that reducing caregiver stress before patients’ death is associated with better bereavement adjustment.

As for why caregivers appear to benefit more than the patients from the parallel palliative care interventions, Dr. Bakitas said in an interview it may be the timing of the assessments, adding that other studies have shown an impact of palliative care at 4 months, but not at 3 months.

pwendling@frontlinemedcom.com

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Palliative care at time of cancer diagnosis improves survival
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AT THE ASCO ANNUAL MEETING 2014

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Inside the Article

Vitals

Key clinical point: Palliative care delivered at the time of cancer diagnosis improves survival.

Major finding: The risk of death at 1 year was significantly lower in the immediate palliative care group versus the delayed palliative care group (hazard ratio 0.72; P = .003).

Data source: A randomized trial of palliative oncology care in 207 patients with advanced cancer and their caregivers.

Disclosures: The National Institute for Nursing Research funded the study. Dr. Bakitas reported having no relevant disclosures.