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Concurrent Hospice Care and Cancer-Directed Treatment for Advanced Lung Cancer and Receipt of Aggressive Care at the End of Life in the Veteran's Health Administration.

Presley CJ, Han L, O'Leary JR, Zhu W, Corneau E, Chao H, Shamas T, Rose M, Lorenz K, Levy CR, Mor V, Gross CP. Concurrent Hospice Care and Cancer-Directed Treatment for Advanced Lung Cancer and Receipt of Aggressive Care at the End of Life in the Veteran's Health Administration. Journal of palliative medicine. 2020 Aug 1; 23(8):1038-1044.

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Abstract:

Aggressive care at the end of life (EOL) is a persistent issue for patients with stage IV nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC). We evaluated the use of concurrent care (CC) with hospice care and cancer-directed treatment simultaneously within the Veteran''s Health Administration (VHA) and aggressive care at the EOL. To determine whether VHA facility-level CC is associated with changes in aggressive care at the EOL. Veterans with stage IV NSCLC who died between 2006 and 2012 and received lung cancer care within the VHA. The primary outcome was aggressive care at EOL (i.e., hospital admissions, chemotherapy, and intensive care unit) within the last month of life. To compare aggressive care across VHA facilities, we used a random intercept multilevel logistic regression model to examine the association between facility-level CC within each study year ( < 10%, 10% to 19%, and = 20%) and aggressive care at the EOL among the decedents as a binary outcome. In total, 18,371 veterans with NSCLC at 154 VHA facilities were identified. Facilities delivering CC for = 20% of veterans (high CC) increased from 20.0% in 2006 to 43.2% in 2012 (? < 0.001). Overall, hospice care significantly increased and aggressive care at EOL decreased over the study period. However, facility-level CC adoption was not associated with any difference in aggressive care at EOL (adjusted odds ratio high CC vs. low CC: 0.91 [95% CI, 0.79 to 1.05], ? = 0.21). Although the VHA adoption of CC increased hospice use among patients with NSCLC, additional measures may be needed to decrease aggressive care at the EOL.





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