• Among nursing home residents in the last year of life, patients with kidney
failure were far less likely to have advance directives that put limitations on
treatments and designated surrogate decision makers compared with other nursing
home residents with serious illnesses.
• Advance directives with these components were associated with a lower use of intensive interventions at the end of life.
• Nearly all kidney failure patients with an advance directive putting limitations on treatment received end-of-life care that was concordant with their preferences.
• Advance directives with these components were associated with a lower use of intensive interventions at the end of life.
• Nearly all kidney failure patients with an advance directive putting limitations on treatment received end-of-life care that was concordant with their preferences.
More than 80,000 Americans die each year while
receiving dialysis therapy for end-stage renal disease.
Newswise, February 3, 2017— A new study indicates that many
nursing home residents receiving dialysis do not have advance directives that
sufficiently address end-of-life treatment decisions.
Those with advance directives that put limitations on
treatments and designated surrogate decision makers had fewer hospitalizations,
intensive procedures, and inpatient deaths, and they were more likely to use
hospice and discontinue dialysis prior to death.
The study, which appears in an upcoming issue of the Clinical
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (CJASN), found that
nearly all patients with an advance directive requesting treatment limitations
received end-of-life care that was in line with their preferences.
Advance directives outlining individuals’ preferences related
to end-of-life care are often promoted for patients with serious illnesses such
as kidney failure as a means to avoid interventions that are unwanted or of
limited benefit.
Little is known about the relation between the content of
advance directives and later treatment decisions among kidney failure patients,
however.
To investigate, Manjula Kurella Tamura, MD, MPH (VA Palo Alto
Health Care System and Stanford University) and her colleagues examined the
prevalence and content of advance directives among 30,716 nursing home
residents with end-stage renal disease (ESRD), and30,825 nursing home residents
with other serious illnesses during the year before death.
The investigators also linked the content of advance
directives to Medicare claims to determine which treatments ESRD patients
received in the last month of life.
In the last year of life, 47% of patients with ESRD vs.
59%-70% of patients with other serious illnesses had any form of advance
directive. In addition, 36% of nursing home residents with ESRD had a
treatment-limiting directive, 22% had a surrogate decision maker, and 13% had
both.
These estimates were 13%-27%, 5%-11%, and 6%-13% lower,
respectively, than for patients with other serious illnesses. For patients with
ESRD who had both a treatment limiting directive and surrogate decision maker,
the frequencies of hospitalization, intensive care unit admission, intensive
procedures, and inpatient death were lower by 13%, 17%, 13% and 14%,
respectively, and hospice use and dialysis discontinuation were 5% and 7%
higher compared with patients with ESRD who lacked both components.
“We found that advance directives indicating treatment
limitations and/or documenting surrogate decision makers were associated with
less intensive end-of-life care among nursing home residents with ESRD, but
these were in place much less often than for nursing home residents with other
serious illnesses,” said Dr. Tamura.
“Because the vast majority of patients with a treatment
limiting directive received care that was consistent with their advance
directive, our findings suggest that efforts to increase engagement in advance
care planning and expand the use of advance directives among patients receiving
dialysis may offer untapped opportunities to better align end-of-life care with
patient preferences and values.”
Study co-authors include Maria Montez-Rath, PhD, Yoshio Hall,
MD, MS, Ronit Katz, DPhil, and Ann O’Hare, MD, MA.
Disclosures: The authors reported no financial disclosures.
The article, entitled “Advance Directives and End-of-Life Care
among Nursing Home Residents Receiving Maintenance Dialysis,” will appear
online at http://cjasn.asnjournals.org/ on
January 5, 2017, doi: 10.2215/CJN.07510716.
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