• Medicine · Apr 2016

    Receipt of Life-Sustaining Treatments for Taiwanese Pediatric Patients Who Died of Cancer in 2001 to 2010: A Retrospective Cohort Study.

    • Yen-Ni Hung, Tsang-Wu Liu, Dong-Tsamn Lin, Yueh-Chih Chen, Jen-Shi Chen, and Siew Tzuh Tang.
    • From the School of Gerontology Health Management and Master's Program in Long-Term Care, College of Nursing, Taipei Medical University (Y-NH); National Institute of Cancer Research, National Health Research Institutes (T-WL); Department of Pediatrics, National Taiwan University (D-TL); Department of Nursing, College of Medicine and Nursing, Hung Kuang University (Y-CC); Division of Hematology-Oncology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Linkou and Chang Gung University College of Medicine (J-SC); and School of Nursing, Chang Gung University and Department of Nursing, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Kaohsiung (STT), Tao-Yuan, Taiwan, R.O.C.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2016 Apr 1; 95 (16): e3461.

    AbstractAggressive life-sustaining treatments have the potential to be continued beyond benefit, but have seldom been systematically/nationally explored in pediatric cancer patients. Furthermore, factors predisposing children dying of cancer to receive life-sustaining treatments at end of life (EOL) have never been investigated in a population-based study. This population-based study explored determinants of receiving life-sustaining treatments in pediatric cancer patients' last month of life. For this retrospective cohort study, we used administrative data on 1603 Taiwanese pediatric cancer patients who died in 2001 to 2010. Individual patient-level data were linked with encrypted identification numbers from the National Register of Deaths Database, Cancer Registration System database, National Health Insurance claims datasets, and Database of Medical Care Institutions Status. Life-sustaining treatments included intensive care unit (ICU) care, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR), and mechanical ventilation. Associations of patient, physician, hospital, and regional factors with receiving ICU care, CPR, and mechanical ventilation in the last month of life were evaluated by multilevel generalized linear mixed models. In their last month of life, 22.89%, 46.48%, and 61.45% of pediatric cancer patients received CPR, mechanical ventilation, and ICU care, respectively, with no significant decreasing trends from 2001 to 2010. Patients were more likely to receive all three identified life-sustaining treatments at EOL if they were diagnosed with a hematologic malignancy or a localized disease, died within 1 year of diagnosis, and received care from a pediatrician. Receipt of ICU care or mechanical ventilation increased with increasing EOL-care intensity of patients' primary hospital, whereas use of mechanical ventilation decreased with increasing quartile of hospice beds in the patients' primary hospital region. Taiwanese pediatric cancer patients received aggressive life-sustaining treatments in the month before death. Healthcare policies and interventions should aim to help pediatricians treating at-risk pediatric cancer patients and hospitals with a tendency to provide aggressive EOL treatments to avoid the expense of life-sustaining treatments when chance of recovery is remote and to devote resources to care that produces the greatest benefits for children, parents, and society.

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