This randomized clinical trial studies a palliative care program in improving the quality of life of patients with high-risk gynecologic malignancies that is original or first tumor in the body (primary) or has come back (recurrent). Palliative care is care given to patients and their families facing the problems associated with life-threatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual. Studying a palliative care program may help doctors learn more about patients quality of life, use of healthcare services, and the relief of pain.
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES: I. Validate a model of proactive palliative medicine referral. II. Quantify the impact of palliative care aggressive care at the end-of-life (PCARE) versus PCARE + idiographic assessment on quality of care and patient satisfaction. III. Utilizing CMO data Investigators will create a cost model for patients randomized to PCARE versus patients refusing randomization. IV. Determine the impact of a proactive model of palliative care consultation at the time of diagnosis on family/caregivers. OUTLINE: Patients are randomized 1 of 2 arms. GROUP I (usual PCARE): Patients complete European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer quality of life-30 (EORTCQLQ-30) and Family Satisfaction with Advanced Cancer Care (FAMCARE) questionnaire every 6 weeks for 3 visits. GROUP II: (usual PCARE + idiographic assessment): Patients complete EORTC QLQ-30, and FAMCARE questionnaire as in Group I and undergo idiographic assessment. Beginning within 4 weeks of their visit with the gynecologic oncologist, patients are referred to outpatient palliative medicine consultation. After completion of study, patients are followed up periodically .
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
95
Palliative Therapy
Ancillary studies
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
The Bronx, New York, United States
Measure increased utilization (move from 18% to over 50%) of palliative medicine and increased proportion of patients receiving services more then 30 days before death as compared to historical controls.
To validate a model of proactive palliative medicine referral; We recorded that proactive referral will result in a clinically relevant increase of utilization of palliative medicine services (\>70% of eligible women will have at least 1 consultation) and facilitate proxy assignment and improve pain/symptom control. There will be increased utilization of palliative care.
Time frame: Baseline
Measured by differential in aggresive care at end-of-life from direct hospital costs in the last 6 months of life between patients that are randomized and refuse randomization.
We measured ACE and decreased direct hospital cost of care in the last 6 months of life between patients randomized and refusing randomization.
Time frame: Up to 3 years
Evaluate costs related to procedures, laboratories, radiographic studies, intensive care admission, and blood transfusion to create a model of potential cost savings as generalized to patients with non-gynecologic cancers within the CMO.
We utilized CMO data to create a cost model for patients randomized to PCARE versus patients refusing randomization. Costs related to potentially "preventable spends" will be obtained from the CMO database for eligible patients.
Time frame: Up to 3 years
FAMCARE Survey will be administered, a 20 item scale measuring the degree to which family members are satisfied with the healthcare providers' behaviors. Comparison of family member scores between 2 arms, as well as at face value will be evaluated.
We administered a patient satisfaction scale
Time frame: up to 3 years
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