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Palliative Sedation in Terminal Cancer Patients Admitted to Hospice or Home Care Programs: Does the Setting Matter? Results From a National Multicenter Observational Study

Authors :
Augusto Caraceni
Raffaella Speranza
Elio Spoldi
Cristina Sonia Ambroset
Stefano Canestrari
Mauro Marinari
Anna Maria Marzi
Luciano Orsi
Laura Piva
Mirta Rocchi
Danila Valenti
Gianluigi Zeppetella
Furio Zucco
Alessandra Raimondi
Leonor Vasconcelos Matos
Cinzia Brunelli
Martini Cinzia
Donatella Giannunzio
Cristina Sesana
Ines Pinna
Alessandro Valle
Antonio Conversano
Stefano Guerini
Gianvito Romanelli
Carlo Tempestini
Gabriella Monolo
Michele Fortis
Gianbattista Cossolini
Loretta Gulmini
null Maria Assunta Mariconti
Luca Moroni
Giancarla Moscatelli
Matteo Longo
Franco Rizzi
Leonardo Trentin
Marco Visentin
Massimo Bernardo
Daniela Degiovanni
Maurizio Mannocci Galeotti
Donato Valenti
Eugenia Malinverni
Carla Negretti
Anna Roman
Cristina Mantica
null Gabriella Farina
Agostino Zambelli
Adriana Turriziani
Giuseppe Micheletto
Antonio Orlando
Barbara Rizzi
Fabio Conforti
Benigno Carrara
Nadia Bongiorni
Massimo Luzzani
Massimo Damini
Source :
Journal of pain and symptom management. 56(1)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Few studies regarding palliative sedation (PS) have been carried out in home care (HC) setting. A comparison of PS rate and practices between hospice (HS) and HC is also lacking.Comparing HC and HS settings for PS rate, patient clinical characteristics before and during PS, decision-making process, and clinical aspects of PS.About 38 HC/HS services in Italy participated in a multicenter observational longitudinal study. Consecutive adult cancer patients followed till death during a four-month period and undergoing PS were eligible. Symptom control and level of consciousness were registered every eight hours to death.About 4276 patients were screened, 2894 followed till death, and 531 (18%) underwent PS. PS rate was 15% in HC and 21% in HS (P 0.001). Principal refractory symptoms were delirium (54%) and dyspnea (45%), respectively, more common in HC (P 0.001) and HS (P = 0.03). Informed consent was not obtained in 72% of patients but achieved by 96% of families. Midazolam was the most used drug (94% HS vs. 75% HC; P 0.001) mainly by continuous infusion (74% HC vs. 89% HS; P 0.001). PS duration was less than 48 hours in 67% of patients. Hydration during PS was less frequent in HC (27% vs. 49%; P 0.001). In the eight hours before death, consciousness level was unrousable to mild physical stimulation in 81% and symptom control complete in 89% of cases.Our results show feasibility of PS in HC and HS and suggest setting differences in rates, indications, and practice of PS, possibly related to patients' selection or care organization.

Details

ISSN :
18736513
Volume :
56
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of pain and symptom management
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e791363195129ef0ee6148d3bfea0a3