October 6, 2015. –
A new study provides compelling evidence that a simple tool can help predict
which patients with cancer may be in their final year of life. The tool, known
as the Surprise Question, was found to predict the risk of cancer
death within one year better than factors such as cancer type or stage alone.
This study will be presented at the upcoming 2015 Palliative Care in Oncology
Symposium in Boston.
The Surprise Question allows clinicians
to identify seriously ill patients who would benefit from conversations about
their goals and values. The aim is for physicians and patients to have better
conversations, more often and earlier, so that care and services can be aligned
with patient priorities and preferences. There is currently no generally
accepted systematic approach for identifying such patients.
The Surprise Question ─ “Would you be
surprised if this patient died within the next year?” ─ was developed in the
1990s. Until now, however, there has been limited evidence of its utility in
the cancer care setting.
"In all areas of medicine, patients may become
seriously ill. Some of these patients will recover completely. Unfortunately,
some won’t,” said lead study author Judith Vick, a medical student at Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland. “Our results showed that
oncology clinicians’ own judgment using the Surprise Question identified about
60% of patients who died within a year.”
The ongoing study, led by researchers at Ariadne Labs in
Boston, enrolled 76 oncology clinicians, including oncologists, nurse
practitioners, and physician assistants at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
The clinicians answered the Surprise Question regarding nearly
5,000 patients as the first step in Ariadne Labs’ comprehensive,
patient-centered Serious Illness Care Program.
When answering the question, the clinicians used their
best clinical judgment. They answered, “Yes, I would be surprised,” for roughly
85% of patients and, “No, I would not be surprised,” for about 15% of the
patients.
Ninety-five percent of patients for whom clinicians
answered “Yes” to the Surprise Question were indeed alive at
one year; 62% of patients for whom the Surprise Question was
answered “No” were alive at one year. Of the patients who died in the next
year, the Surprise Question failed to identify about 40%.
The Surprise Question can be used to
identify many patients who will die in the next year and allow patients and
their clinicians to plan for this possibility. More research is needed,
however, to understand factors that contribute to non-recognition of so many
patients and to develop better predictors of patient death.
The researchers plan to investigate clinician
characteristics that might affect how accurately they answer the Surprise
Question and to examine the characteristics of patients for whom the
answer to the question was inaccurate, i.e., those who died or lived contrary
to expectations.
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