BETHESDA, MD. – Palliative care, once limited to the last days before death, is ripe for research and essential to improving patient quality of life both in and out of the hospital, according to speakers at a summit sponsored by the National Institute of Nursing Research and National Institutes of Health partners.
Dr. Ira R. Byock
"We have to put the clinician back in the mix," Dr. Ira R. Byock, professor of anesthesiology and director of palliative medicine at Dartmouth Medical School in Hanover, N.H., said in the opening keynote address.
According to several speakers at the meeting, putting the clinician back in the mix may mean changing the thinking about palliative care from something that begins in the last days of life to something started as early as a patient’s first day of a cancer diagnosis, as well as making it easier for clinicians to explore palliative care strategies.
One route to improving palliative care is through rigorous research in both inpatient and outpatient settings to see what works, according to Dr. Jennifer S. Temel, clinical director of thoracic oncology at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.
Dr. Temel made the case for the value of palliative care research when she discussed her recent study of early palliative care for patients with advanced lung cancer (N. Engl. J. Med. 2010;363:733-42).
Chemotherapy can improve symptoms, "but the problem is that patients are trading off their cancer symptoms for chemotherapy-related symptoms (fatigue, nausea, neuropathy), so overall physical quality of life is not significantly changed," she said.
In a randomized, controlled trial of 151 adults with metastatic non–small cell lung cancer, patients who received palliative care soon after their diagnoses had significantly less depression and anxiety, compared with controls. Another significant finding: The median survival was longer among patients in the early palliative care group, compared with controls (11.6 months vs. 8.9 months; P = .02).
Patients with advanced illnesses suffer from both physical and psychological symptoms, Dr. Temel said.
Dr. Temel’s findings suggest that early palliative care can be used in conjunction with chemotherapy, and cancer patients could be managed jointly in an oncology and clinic setting. However, more research is needed to support and expand her findings.
To help promote and enhance additional research in the field of palliative care, Dr. Amy P. Abernethy, an oncologist at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C., described the creation of the U.S. Palliative Care Research Cooperative (PCRC) group. Dr. Abernethy is the coprincipal investigator of the PCRC, which was established in 2010 and funded by the National Institute of Nursing Research. The PCRC is currently establishing research protocols and procedures through which palliative care researchers will be able to suggest topics and submit grant applications, said Dr. Abernethy. "We must focus our scope, choose studies carefully, and do them well," she said.