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Prognostic Awareness, Palliative Care Use, and Barriers to Palliative Care in Patients Undergoing Immunotherapy or Chemo-Immunotherapy for Metastatic Lung Cancer

Laurie E. McLouth, Jennifer Gabbard, Beverly J. Levine, Shannon L. Golden, Thomas Lycan, W. Jeffrey Petty, Kathryn E. Weaver

2023Journal of Palliative Medicine20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background and Objectives: This study describes patients' prognostic awareness and palliative care use in the setting of immunotherapy for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (mNSCLC). Design: We surveyed 60 mNSCLC patients receiving immunotherapy at a large academic medical center; conducted follow-up interviews with 12 survey participants; and abstracted palliative care use, advance directive completion, and death within a year of survey completion from the medical record. Results: Forty seven percent of patients surveyed thought they would be cured; 83% were not interested in palliative care. Interviews suggested oncologists emphasized therapeutic options when discussing prognosis and that commonly used descriptions of palliative care may exacerbate misperceptions. Only 7% had received outpatient palliative care and 8% had an advance directive a year after the survey; only 16% of the 19 patients who died had received outpatient palliative care. Conclusions: Interventions are needed to facilitate prognostic discussions and outpatient palliative care during immunotherapy. Clinical Trial Registration Number NCT03741868.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePalliative careImmunotherapyLung cancerPsychological interventionCancerFamily medicineIntensive care medicineOncologyInternal medicineNursingPalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesCancer survivorship and careChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life