Beschreibung:
Abstract BACKGROUND Patients with high-grade glioma (HGG), WHO grade 3 or 4, have substantial palliative care needs. As evidence suggests early palliative care consultation (PCC) yields improved quality of life in advanced cancer, our aim was to determine the occurrence, timing, and factors associated with PCC in HGG. METHODS Adults with HGG diagnosed between 8/3/2011 and 1/23/2020 were identified retrospectively from a large, academic, multi-center health system cancer registry. Patients were stratified by any prior PCC (yes/no), and timing of PCC by disease phase: (1) diagnosis (before radiation), (2) initial treatment (first-line chemotherapy/radiation), (3) second-line treatment (second-line to last chemotherapy), and (4) end-of-life (after last chemotherapy). Univariate analyses (e.g., Chi-square test) were conducted to compare PCC to non-PCC groups, based on data distribution. RESULTS Of 621 HGG patients, 134 (21.58%) received PCC, with 14 (10.45%) referred during phase 1; 35 (26.12%) in phase 2; 20 (14.93%) in phase 3; and 65 (48.51%) in phase 4 with a median of 74 days (IQR 15, 277) from initial PCC to death. The majority of referrals were inpatient (111 (82.84%)). The PCC group did not differ significantly from non-PCC in age, sex, language, race, or ethnicity, but did differ by marital status: single (263 (42.35%) vs 187 (38.4%)), divorced/separated (37 (27.61%) vs 107 (21.97%)), married/civil union (17 (12.69%) vs 154 (31.62%)); (Chi-square p < .01). Compared to non-PCC, more patients in the PCC group had glioblastoma histopathology (89.55% vs. 82.14%, p = .04). CONCLUSION A minority of HGG patients ever received PCC, which primarily occurred in the inpatient setting, and half of those referred for PCC received it during the end-of-life phase. Thus, only about one in 10 patients in the entire cohort potentially received the benefits of early PCC. Further studies should elucidate barriers and facilitators to early palliative care in HGG.