학술논문

Patient-centered and efficacious advance care planning in cancer: Protocol and key design considerations for the PEACe-compare trial
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Nursing
Health Sciences
Health Services
Pain Research
Cancer
Chronic Pain
Comparative Effectiveness Research
Clinical Research
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Behavioral and Social Science
Management of diseases and conditions
7.2 End of life care
Good Health and Well Being
Advance Care Planning
Advance Directives
Communication
Humans
Neoplasms
Patient-Centered Care
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Terminal Care
Advance health care planning
Single-blind methods
Health-related quality of life
Decision making
Intervention study
cancer
Caregiver
Medical and Health Sciences
General Clinical Medicine
Public Health
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundFailure to deliver care near the end of life that reflects the needs, values and preferences of patients with advanced cancer remains a major shortcoming of our cancer care delivery system.MethodsA mixed-methods comparative effectiveness trial of in-person advance care planning (ACP) discussions versus web-based ACP is currently underway at oncology practices in Western Pennsylvania. Patients with advanced cancer and their caregivers are invited to enroll. Participants are randomized to either (1) in-person ACP discussions via face-to-face visits with a nurse facilitator following the Respecting Choices® Conversation Guide or (2) web-based ACP using the PREPARE for your care™ web-based ACP tool. The trial compares the effect of these two interventions on patient and family caregiver outcomes (engagement in ACP, primary outcome; ACP discussions; advance directive (AD) completion; quality of end-of-life (EOL) care; EOL goal attainment; caregiver psychological symptoms; healthcare utilization at EOL) and assesses implementation costs. Factors influencing ACP effectiveness are assessed via in-depth interviews with patients, caregivers and clinicians.DiscussionThis trial will provide new and much-needed empirical evidence about two patient-facing ACP approaches that successfully overcome limitations of traditional written advance directives but entail very different investments of time and resources. It is innovative in using mixed methods to evaluate not only the comparative effectiveness of these approaches, but also the contexts and mechanisms influencing effectiveness. Data from this study will inform clinicians, payers and health systems seeking to adopt and scale the most effective and efficient ACP strategy in real-world oncology settings.