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The effect on survival of continuing chemotherapy to near death
by
Neville, Bridget A
, Earle, Craig C
, Landrum, Mary Beth
, Ayanian, John Z
, Saito, Akiko M
in
Cancer
/ Cancer therapies
/ Chemotherapy
/ Drug therapy
/ Epidemiology
/ Health aspects
/ Health care policy
/ Health maintenance organizations
/ Health services
/ Hispanic people
/ HMOs
/ Hospice care
/ Lung cancer, Non-small cell
/ Medical research
/ Medicare
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Pain Medicine
/ Palliative care
/ Palliative Medicine
/ Physicians
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Research Article
/ Studies
/ Teaching hospitals
2011
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The effect on survival of continuing chemotherapy to near death
by
Neville, Bridget A
, Earle, Craig C
, Landrum, Mary Beth
, Ayanian, John Z
, Saito, Akiko M
in
Cancer
/ Cancer therapies
/ Chemotherapy
/ Drug therapy
/ Epidemiology
/ Health aspects
/ Health care policy
/ Health maintenance organizations
/ Health services
/ Hispanic people
/ HMOs
/ Hospice care
/ Lung cancer, Non-small cell
/ Medical research
/ Medicare
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Pain Medicine
/ Palliative care
/ Palliative Medicine
/ Physicians
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Research Article
/ Studies
/ Teaching hospitals
2011
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
The effect on survival of continuing chemotherapy to near death
by
Neville, Bridget A
, Earle, Craig C
, Landrum, Mary Beth
, Ayanian, John Z
, Saito, Akiko M
in
Cancer
/ Cancer therapies
/ Chemotherapy
/ Drug therapy
/ Epidemiology
/ Health aspects
/ Health care policy
/ Health maintenance organizations
/ Health services
/ Hispanic people
/ HMOs
/ Hospice care
/ Lung cancer, Non-small cell
/ Medical research
/ Medicare
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Pain Medicine
/ Palliative care
/ Palliative Medicine
/ Physicians
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Research Article
/ Studies
/ Teaching hospitals
2011
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The effect on survival of continuing chemotherapy to near death
Journal Article
The effect on survival of continuing chemotherapy to near death
2011
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Overview
Background
Overuse of anti-cancer therapy is an important quality-of-care issue. An aggressive approach to treatment can have negative effects on quality of life and cost, but its effect on survival is not well-defined.
Methods
Using the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results-Medicare database, we identified 7,879 Medicare-enrolled patients aged 65 or older who died after having survived at least 3 months after diagnosis of advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) between 1991 and 1999. We used Cox proportional hazards regression analysis, propensity scores, and instrumental variable analysis (IVA) to compare survival among patients who never received chemotherapy (n = 4,345), those who received standard chemotherapy but not within two weeks prior to death (n = 3,235), and those who were still receiving chemotherapy within 14 days of death (n = 299). Geographic variation in the application of chemotherapy was used as the instrument for IVA.
Results
Receipt of chemotherapy was associated with a 2-month improvement in overall survival. However, based on three different statistical approaches, no additional survival benefit was evident from continuing chemotherapy within 14 days of death. Moreover, patients receiving chemotherapy near the end of life were much less likely to enter hospice (81% versus 51% with no chemotherapy and 52% with standard chemotherapy, P < 0.001), or were more likely to be admitted within only 3 days of death.
Conclusions
Continuing chemotherapy for advanced NSCLC until very near death is associated with a decreased likelihood of receiving hospice care but not prolonged survival. Oncologists should strive to discontinue chemotherapy as death approaches and encourage patients to enroll in hospice for better end-of-life palliative care.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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