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Can We Make More Accurate Prognoses During Last Days of Life?

Authors :
Bouchard, Sylvie
Iancu, Andreea Paula
Neamt, Elena
Collette, François
Dufresne, Sylvie
Guercin, Patricia Maureen
Jeyaganth, Suganthiny
Kovacina, Desanka
Malagón, Taliá
Musgrave, Laurie
Romano, Marilisa
Wong, Jenny
Skinner-Robertson, Sybil
Source :
Journal of Palliative Medicine. Jul2024, Vol. 27 Issue 7, p895-904. 10p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Life expectancy prediction is important for end-of-life planning. Established methods (Palliative Performance Scale [PPS], Palliative Prognostic Index [PPI]) have been validated for intermediate- to long-term prognoses, but last-weeks-of-life prognosis has not been well studied. Patients admitted to a palliative care facility often have a life expectancy of less than three weeks. Reliable last-weeks-of-life prognostic tools are needed. Objective: To improve short-term survival prediction in terminally ill patients. Method: This prospective study included all patients admitted to a palliative care facility in Montreal, Canada, over one year. PPS and PPI were assessed until patients' death. Seven prognostic clinical signs of impending death (Short-Term Prognosis Signs [SPS]) were documented daily. Results: The analyses included 273 patients (76% cancer). The median survival time for a PPS ≤20% was 2.5 days, while for a PPS ≥50% it was 44.5 days, for a PPI >8 the median survival was 3.5 days and for a PPI ≤4 it was 38.5 days. Receiver operating characteristic curves showed a high accuracy in predicting survival. Median survival after the first occurrence of any SPS was below one week. Conclusions: This study demonstrated that the PPS and PPI perform well between one week and three months extending their usefulness to shorter term survival prediction. SPS items provided survival information during the last week of life. Using SPS along with PPS and PPI during the last weeks of life could enable a more precise short-term survival prediction across various end-of-life diagnoses. The translation of this research into clinical practice could lead to a better adapted treatment, the identification of a most appropriate care setting for patients, and improved communication of prognosis with patients and families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10966218
Volume :
27
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Palliative Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178652359
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2023.0675