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Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer 6/2012

01-06-2012 | Original Article

Symptom improvement as prognostic factor for survival in cancer patients undergoing palliative care: a pilot study

Authors: Filomena Narducci, Roberta Grande, Lucia Mentuccia, Tiziana Trapasso, Isabella Sperduti, Emanuela Magnolfi, Anna Maria Fariello, Donatello Gemma, Teresa Gamucci

Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer | Issue 6/2012

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Abstract

Background

The Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale (ESAS) is a validated tool for physical symptom assessment in palliative care practice which evaluates symptoms through a numeric scale from 0 to 10. The use of symptom improvement as a prognostic factor is controversial. To this purpose, a pilot study in advanced cancer patients now undergoing only palliative care was conducted.

Methods

Patients were considered eligible if no longer able to receive any anticancer treatment; they were scheduled to undergo ESAS assessment at the hospitalization and hospital discharge time points. Symptoms' scores were divided into three severity classes: mild, moderate and severe. Differences across symptoms' classes between hospitalization and hospital discharge time points were analysed with the paired-data McNemar test, according to tumour types.

Results

ESAS assessment was administered to 68 patients with gastrointestinal (39 patients) and non-small cell lung cancer (29 patients); median age was 69 years; Karnofsky Performance Status was 50 in 27 (39.7%) patients and >50 in 41 (60.3%) patients. Palliative Prognostic Score was A for 26 (38.2%) patients, B for 37 (54.4%) patients and C for 5 (7.4%) patients. A statistically significant reduction of severe severity class rates was observed. Symptom improvement correlates with survival improvement: Palliative Prognostic Score (hazard ratio (HR) 2.95, 95% CI 1.35–6.41, p = 0.006) and anorexia (HR 3.21, 95% 1.33–7.72, p = 0.009) appear to be prognostic factors for survival at the multivariate analysis for gastrointestinal cancer patients; asthenia is the only significant variable (HR 5.11, 95% CI 1.86–14.03, p = 0.002) for non-small cell lung cancer patients.

Conclusions

Symptom improvement according to ESAS after palliative care treatment represents an important prognostic for survival in patients no longer suitable to receive any anticancer active therapies.
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Metadata
Title
Symptom improvement as prognostic factor for survival in cancer patients undergoing palliative care: a pilot study
Authors
Filomena Narducci
Roberta Grande
Lucia Mentuccia
Tiziana Trapasso
Isabella Sperduti
Emanuela Magnolfi
Anna Maria Fariello
Donatello Gemma
Teresa Gamucci
Publication date
01-06-2012
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Supportive Care in Cancer / Issue 6/2012
Print ISSN: 0941-4355
Electronic ISSN: 1433-7339
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-011-1207-8

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