• J Gen Intern Med · Apr 2022

    Older Patients with Advanced Chronic Kidney Disease and Their Perspectives on Prognostic Information: a Qualitative Study.

    • Bjorg Thorsteinsdottir, Nataly R Espinoza Suarez, Susan Curtis, Annika T Beck, Ian Hargraves, Kevin Shaw, WongSusan P YSPYUniversity of Washington and VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Seattle, WA, USA., LaTonya J Hickson, Kasey R Boehmer, Brigid Amberg, Erin Dahlen, Cristina Wirtz, Robert C Albright, Ashok Kumbamu, Jon C Tilburt, and Erica J Sutton.
    • Division of Community Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, 200 First St SW, Rochester, MN, USA. Thorsteinsdottir.bjorg@mayo.edu.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2022 Apr 1; 37 (5): 103110371031-1037.

    BackgroundPrognostic information is key to shared decision-making, particularly in life-limiting illness like advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD).ObjectiveTo understand the prognostic information preferences expressed by older patients with CKD.Design And ParticipantsQualitative study of 28 consecutively enrolled patients over 65 years of age with non-dialysis dependent CKD stages 3b-5, receiving care in a multi-disciplinary CKD clinic.ApproachSemi-structured telephone or in-person interviews to explore patients' preference for and perceived value of individualized prognostic information. Interviews were analyzed using inductive content analysis.Key ResultsWe completed interviews with 28 patients (77.7 ± SD 6.8 years, 69% men). Patients varied in their preference for prognostic information and more were interested in their risk of progression to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) than in life expectancy. Many conflated ESKD risk with risk of death, perceiving a binary choice between dialysis and quick decline and death. Patients expressed that prognostic information would allow them to plan, take care of important business, and think about their treatment options. Patients were accepting of prognostic uncertainty and imagined leveraging it to nurture hope or motivate them to better manage risk factors. They endorsed the desire to receive prognosis of life expectancy even though it may be hard to accept or difficult to talk about but worried it could create helplessness for other patients in their situation.ConclusionMost, but not all, patients were interested in prognostic information and could see its value in motivating behavior change and allowing planning. Some patients expressed concern that information on life expectancy might cause depression and hopelessness. Therefore, prognostic information is most appropriate as part of a clinical conversation that fosters shared decision-making and helps patients consider treatment risks, benefits, and burdens in context of their lives.© 2021. Society of General Internal Medicine.

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