A specialized home care intervention improves survival among older post-surgical cancer patients

被引:1
|
作者
McCorkle, R
Strumpf, NE
Nuamah, IF
Adler, DC
Cooley, ME
Jepson, C
Lusk, EJ
Torosian, M
机构
[1] Yale Univ, Sch Nursing, Ctr Excellence Chron Illness Care, New Haven, CT 06536 USA
[2] Bristol Myers Squibb Co, Princeton, NJ USA
[3] Fox Chase Canc Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19111 USA
[4] Temple Univ, Sch Nursing, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA
[5] Univ Penn, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
关键词
cancer; specialized home care; post-surgery; elderly; advanced practice nurse; survival;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R592 [老年病学]; C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 100203 ;
摘要
CONTEXT: Changes in the healthcare system have resulted in shortened hospital stays, moving the focus of care from the hospital to the home. Patients are discharged post-operatively with ongoing needs, and whether they receive nursing care post-hospitalization can influence their recovery and survival. Little information is available about the factors that influence outcomes, including the survival of older cancer patients after cancer surgery. OBJECTIVE: To compare the length of survival of older post-surgical cancer patients who received a specialized home care intervention provided by advanced practice nurses (APNs) with that of patients who received usual follow-up care in an ambulatory setting. We also assessed potential predictors of survival in terms of depressive symptoms, symptom distress, functional status, comorbidities, length of hospital stay, age of patient, and stage of disease. DESIGN: A randomized controlled intervention study. SETTING: Discharged older cancer patients after surgery at a Comprehensive Cancer Center in southeastern Pennsylvania. PATIENTS: Three hundred seventy-five patients aged 60 to 92, newly diagnosed with solid cancers, were treated surgically between February 1993 and December 1995. One hundred ninety patients were randomized to the intervention groups and 185 to the usual care group. INTERVENTION: The intervention was a standardized protocol that consisted of standard assessment and management post-surgical guidelines, doses of instructional content, and schedules of contacts. The intervention lasted 4 weeks and consisted of three home visits and five telephone contacts provided by APNs, Both the patients and their family caregivers received comprehensive clinical assessments, monitoring, and teaching, including skills training. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Time from enrollment of patients into the study until death or last date known alive at the end of November 1996, RESULTS: During the 44-month follow-up period, 93 (24.8%) of 375 patients died. Forty-one (22%) of those who died were patients in the specialized home care intervention group, compared with 52 (28%) in the usual care group. Stage of disease at diagnosis differed between the two groups at baseline (38% late stage patients in the intervention group compared with 26% in the control group, P = .01), so stratified analysis was performed. Overall, the specialized home care intervention group was found to have increased survival (P =.002 using stratified log-rank test). Among early stage patients only, there was no difference in survival between the intervention and control groups. Among late stage patients, there was improved survival in the intervention group. For example, 2-year survival among late stage intervention group cases was 67% com pared with 40% among control cases. When Cox's proportional hazard model was used to adjust for significant baseline covariates, the relative hazard of death in the usual care group was 2.04 (CI: 1.33 to 3.12; P = .001) after adjusting for stage of disease and surgical hospitalization length of stay. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first empirical study of postsurgical cancer patients to link a specialized home care intervention by advanced practice nurses with improved survival. Additional research is needed to test home care interventions aimed at maintaining quality of life outcomes and their effects on survival of post-surgical cancer patients.
引用
收藏
页码:1707 / 1713
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Frailty in older Turkish cancer patients undergoing post-surgical adjuvant chemotherapy
    Goktas, Sonay
    Akin, Semiha
    Kosucu, Sibel Nargiz
    Dogan, Pinar
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE NURSING, 2022, 28 (12) : 590 - 599
  • [2] In-Hospital Mortality and Post-Surgical Complications Among Cancer Patients with Metabolic Syndrome
    Akinyemiju, Tomi
    Sakhuja, Swati
    Vin-Raviv, Neomi
    OBESITY SURGERY, 2018, 28 (03) : 683 - 692
  • [3] In-Hospital Mortality and Post-Surgical Complications Among Cancer Patients with Metabolic Syndrome
    Tomi Akinyemiju
    Swati Sakhuja
    Neomi Vin-Raviv
    Obesity Surgery, 2018, 28 : 683 - 692
  • [4] Clinicopathological features, post-surgical survival and prognostic indicators of elderly patients with hepatocellular carcinoma
    Zhou, L.
    Rui, J. A.
    Wang, S. B.
    Chen, S. G.
    Qu, Q.
    Chi, T. Y.
    Wei, X.
    Han, K.
    Zhang, N.
    Zhao, H. T.
    EJSO, 2006, 32 (07): : 767 - 772
  • [5] Comorbidity in older surgical cancer patients: Influence on patient care and outcome
    Janssen-Heijnen, Maryska L. G.
    Maas, Huub A. A. M.
    Houterman, Saskia
    Lemmens, Valery E. P. P.
    Rutten, Harm J. T.
    Coebergh, Jan Willem W.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2007, 43 (15) : 2179 - 2193
  • [6] Right and Left Colorectal Cancer: Differences in Post-Surgical-Care Outcomes and Survival in Elderly Patients
    Miron Fernandez, Irene
    Mera Velasco, Santiago
    Turino Luque, Jesus Damian
    Gonzalez Poveda, Ivan
    Ruiz Lopez, Manuel
    Santoyo Santoyo, Julio
    CANCERS, 2021, 13 (11)
  • [7] Psychologic Intervention Improves Survival for Breast Cancer Patients A Randomized Clinical Trial
    Andersen, Barbara L.
    Yang, Hae-Chung
    Farrar, William B.
    Golden-Kreutz, Deanna M.
    Emery, Charles F.
    Thornton, Lisa M.
    Young, Donn C.
    Carson, William E., III
    CANCER, 2008, 113 (12) : 3450 - 3458
  • [8] Dyadic psychological intervention for patients with cancer and caregivers in home-based specialized palliative care: The Domus model
    Von Heymann-Horan, Annika B.
    Puggaard, Louise B.
    Nissen, Kathrine G.
    Benthien, Kirstine Skov
    Bidstrup, Pernille
    Coyne, James
    Johansen, Christoffer
    Kjellberg, Jakob
    Nordly, Mie
    Sjogren, Per
    Timm, Helle
    Von der Maase, Hans
    Guldin, Mai-Britt
    PALLIATIVE & SUPPORTIVE CARE, 2018, 16 (02) : 189 - 197
  • [9] Surgical risk and post-operative complications in older unfit cancer patients
    Kristjansson, Siri R.
    Farinella, Eriberto
    Gaskell, Suzanne
    Audisio, Riccardo A.
    CANCER TREATMENT REVIEWS, 2009, 35 (06) : 499 - 502
  • [10] Factors facilitating home death in non-cancer older patients receiving home medical care
    Masumoto, Shoichi
    Sato, Mikiya
    Ichinohe, Yumiko
    Maeno, Tetsuhiro
    GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2019, 19 (12) : 1231 - 1235