PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study examines quality of life factors at end of life for patients with cancer

2012-07-10
(Press-News.org) CHICAGO – Better quality of life at the end of life for patients with advanced cancer was associated with avoiding hospitalizations and the intensive care unit, worrying less, praying or meditating, being visited by a pastor in a hospital or clinic, and having a therapeutic alliance with their physician, according to a report published Online First by Archives of Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication.

When treatments to cure a patient's cancer are no longer an option, the focus of care often shifts from prolonging life to promoting the quality of life (QOL) at the end of life (EOL). But researchers note in their study background that there has been a gap in data on the strongest predictors of higher QOL at the EOL.

"The aim of this study was to identify the best set of predictors of QOL of patients in their final week of life. By doing so, we identify promising targets for health care interventions to improve QOL of dying patients," the authors note.

The study by Baohui Zhang, M.S., formerly of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, and colleagues included 396 patients with advanced cancer and their caregivers as part of the Coping with Cancer study. The average age of patients was almost 59 years.

A set of nine factors explained the most variance in patients' QOL at the EOL: intensive care stays in the final week, hospital deaths, patient worry at baseline, religious prayer or meditation at baseline, site of cancer care, feeding tube use in the final week, pastoral care within the hospital or clinic, chemotherapy in the final week, and a patient-physician therapeutic alliance where the patient felt they were treated as a "whole person," according to the study.

"Two of the most important determinants of poor patient quality QOL at the EOL were dying in a hospital and ICU stays in the last week of life. Therefore, attempts to avoid costly hospitalizations and to encourage transfer of hospitalized patients to home or hospice might improve patient QOL at the EOL," the authors comment.

Patient worry at baseline also was "one of the most influential predictors of worse QOL at the EOL," the authors note.

"By reducing patient worry, encouraging contemplation, integrating pastoral care within medical care, fostering a therapeutic alliance between patient and physician that enables patients to feel dignified, and preventing unnecessary hospitalizations and receipt of life-prolonging care, physicians can enable their patients to live their last days with the highest possible level of comfort and care," the authors conclude.

(Arch Intern Med. Published online July 9, 2012. doi:10.1001/archinternmed.2012.2364. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)

Editor's Note: This research was supported in part by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Cancer Institute, and the Center for Psychosocial Epidemiology and Outcomes Research, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.

Invited Commentary: Improving Patients' Quality of Life at End of Life

In an invited commentary, Alan B. Zonderman, Ph.D., and Michele K. Evans, M.D., of the Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Md., write: "The concept of quality of the EOL [end of life] in cancer patients has been under examined in cancer medicine in the quest to develop newer, more advanced, and effective modalities of interventional cytotoxic therapies. This study highlights the scarcity of research in an area that can give us important tools in further refining coherent treatment strategies for patients throughout the timeline of cancer treatment and disease trajectory."

"It is surprising at this stage in the development and implementation of complex multimodal cancer treatment strategies that the factors most critical in influencing the quality of the EOL are not clearly defined and considered along the entire timeline beginning with cancer diagnosis," they continue.

"This work, as well as the American Society of Clinical Oncology statement, support early introduction of palliative care for advanced cancer patients," the authors conclude.

(Arch Intern Med. Published online July 9, 2012. doi:10.1001/archinternmed.2012.3169. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)

Editor's Note: The National Institute on Aging Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health supported this research. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.

### For more information, contact JAMA Network Media Relations at 312-464-JAMA (5262) or email mediarelations@jamanetwork.org.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Use of drug-eluting stents varies widely; Modestly correlated with coronary artery restenosis risk

2012-07-10
CHICAGO – A study based on more than 1.5 million percutaneous coronary intervention procedures (such as balloon angioplasty or stent placement to open narrowed coronary arteries) suggests that the use of drug-eluting stents varies widely among U.S. physicians, and is only modestly correlated with the patient's risk of coronary artery restenosis (renarrowing), according to a report published Online First by Archives of Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication. Drug-eluting stents (DES) are effective in reducing restenosis and the benefits are greatest in patients ...

Study suggests poorer outcomes for patients with stroke hospitalized on weekends

2012-07-10
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: 3 P.M. (CT), MONDAY, JULY 9, 2012 CHICAGO – A study of patients with stroke admitted to English National Health Service public hospitals suggests that patients who were hospitalized on weekends were less likely to receive urgent treatments and had worse outcomes, according to a report published Online First by Archives of Neurology, a JAMA Network publication. Studies from other countries have suggested higher mortality in patients who were admitted to the hospital on weekends for a variety of medical conditions, a phenomenon known as "the weekend ...

Taking a bird's eye view could cut wildlife collisions with aircraft

2012-07-10
Using lights to make aircraft more visible to birds could help reduce the risk of bird strikes, new research by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) has found. The study, which examined how Canada geese responded to different radio-controlled model aircraft, is the first of its kind and is published in the British Ecological Society's Journal of Applied Ecology. Aircraft collisions with wildlife – primarily birds – is a serious and growing threat to civil and military aviation, as well as an expensive one: bird strikes cost civil aviation alone more than $1.2 billion ...

Overqualified recent immigrants three times as likely to be injured at work

2012-07-10
Men who are recent immigrants and over qualified for their jobs are more than three times as likely to sustain an injury at work as their appropriately qualified peers who have been in the country for some time, suggests Canadian research published online in Injury Prevention. In Canada, in 2008, one in four employees between the ages of 25 and 54 was overqualified for the job they were doing, figures indicate. The researchers drew on almost 63,500 responses to the representative household Canadian Community Health Surveys of 2003 and 2005 to look at the relationship ...

Cutting daily sitting time to under 3 hours might extend life by 2 years

2012-07-10
[Sedentary behaviour and life expectancy in the USA: a cause-deleted life table analysis doi 10.1136/bmjopen-2012-000828] Restricting the amount of time spent seated every day to less than 3 hours might boost the life expectancy of US adults by an extra 2 years, indicates an analysis of published research in the online journal BMJ Open. And cutting down TV viewing to less than 2 hours every day might extend life by almost 1.4 years, the findings suggest. Several previous studies have linked extended periods spent sitting down and/or watching TV to poor health, ...

Better treatment for brain cancer revealed by new molecular insights

2012-07-10
Nearly a third of adults with the most common type of brain cancer develop recurrent, invasive tumors after being treated with a drug called bevacizumab. The molecular underpinnings behind these detrimental effects have now been published by Cell Press in the July issue of Cancer Cell. The findings reveal a new treatment strategy that could reduce tumor invasiveness and improve survival in these drug-resistant patients. "Understanding how and why these tumors adopt this invasive behavior is critical to being able to prevent this recurrence pattern and maximizing the benefits ...

Researchers find new target deep within cancer cells

2012-07-10
Investigators reporting in the July issue of the Cell Press journal Cancer Cell have found that blocking a fundamental process deep within cancer cells can selectively kill them and spare normal cells. For more than a century, clinicians have known that abnormalities of the nucleolus—a small, rounded mass within the cell nucleus—can be diagnostic for cancer. The nucleolus is where certain genes are read to form the components of ribosomes, the cellular machines that make proteins. While abnormalities in the nucleolus are known to be diagnostic for cancer, researchers ...

Pediatric tumors traced to stem cells in developing brain​​

2012-07-10
Stem cells that come from a specific part of the developing brain help fuel the growth of brain tumors caused by an inherited condition, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis report. Scientists showed in mice that disabling a gene linked to a common pediatric tumor disorder, neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), made stem cells from one part of the brain proliferate rapidly. But the same genetic deficit had no effect on stem cells from another brain region. The results can be explained by differences in the way stem cells from these regions ...

Training improves recognition of quickly presented objects

2012-07-10
So far it has seemed an irreparable limitation of human perception that we strain to perceive things in the very rapid succession of, say, less than half a second. Psychologists call this deficit "attentional blink." We'll notice that first car spinning out in our path, but maybe not register the one immediately beyond it. It turns out, we can learn to do better after all. In a new study researchers now based at Brown University overcame the blink with just a little bit of training that was never been tried before. "Attention is a very important component of visual perception," ...

High-level commission finds an epidemic of bad laws is stifling the global AIDS response

2012-07-10
NEW YORK, 9 July 2012—Punitive laws and human rights abuses are costing lives, wasting money and stifling the global AIDS response, according to a report by the Global Commission on HIV and the Law, an independent body of global leaders and experts. The Commission report, "HIV and the Law: Risks, Rights and Health," finds evidence that governments in every region of the world have wasted the potential of legal systems in the fight against HIV. The report also concludes that laws based on evidence and human rights strengthen the global AIDS response - these laws exist and ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New vaccine effective against coronaviruses that haven’t even emerged yet

Simulated chemistry: New AI platform designs tomorrow’s cancer drugs

Human ‘neural compass’ pinpointed in new study

Personalized screening early in pregnancy may improve preeclampsia detection

Expanding a lymph node, boosting a vaccine

GIST-MIT CSAIL researchers develop a biomechanical dataset for badminton performance analysis

Study sheds light on 11th century Arab-Muslim optical scientist whose work laid ground for modern-day physics

Rethinking “socially admitted” patients

A better way to ride a motorcycle

Survey of US parents highlights need for more awareness about newborn screening, cystic fibrosis and what to do if results are abnormal

Outcomes of children admitted to a pediatric observation unit with a psychiatric comanagement model

SCAI announces 2024-25 SCAI-WIN CHIP Fellowship Recipient

SCAI’s 30 in Their 30’s Award recognizes the contributions of early career interventional cardiologists

SCAI Emerging Leaders Mentorship Program welcomes a new class of interventional cardiology leaders

SCAI bestows highest designation ranking to leading interventional cardiologists

SCAI names James B. Hermiller, MD, MSCAI, President for 2024-25

Racial and ethnic disparities in all-cause and cause-specific mortality among US youth

Ready to launch program introduces medical students to interventional cardiology field

Variety in building block softness makes for softer amorphous materials

Tennis greats Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova honored at A Conversation With a Living Legend®

Seismic waves used to track LA’s groundwater recharge after record wet winter

When injecting pure spin into chiral materials, direction matters

New quantum sensing scheme could lead to enhanced high-precision nanoscopic techniques

New MSU research: Are carbon-capture models effective?

One vaccine, many cancers

nTIDE April 2024 Jobs Report: Post-pandemic gains seen in employment for people with disabilities appear to continue

Exploring oncogenic driver molecular alterations in Hispanic/Latin American cancer patients

Hungry, hungry white dwarfs: solving the puzzle of stellar metal pollution

New study reveals how teens thrive online: factors that shape digital success revealed

U of T researchers discover compounds produced by gut bacteria that can treat inflammation

[Press-News.org] Study examines quality of life factors at end of life for patients with cancer