The Scope of Practice of an Embedded Pediatric Palliative Oncology Clinic.

in Journal of pain and symptom management by Hee Su Park, Nicholas P DeGroote, Anna Lange, Dio Kavalieratos, Katharine E Brock

TLDR

  • The study analyzed 1919 outpatient PPC visits for children with cancer and found that the scope of PPC practice is broad and varied, with more domains addressed in visits closer to EOL and solid tumor visits.

Abstract

Pediatric palliative care (PPC) improves end-of-life (EOL) outcomes for children with cancer. Though PPC visits are the 'intervention' in studies focused on EOL care, the content of PPC visits within pediatric oncology is poorly understood. This study aimed to understand the scope of PPC practice during visits for children with cancer and their families. This was a retrospective cohort study of patients 0-27 years with cancer seen in PPC clinic within an academic pediatric oncology center between 2017 and 2022. During each PPC visit, documenting providers chose the domains discussed or managed (goals of care, symptom management, and care coordination with respective subdomains). Data was abstracted from the electronic health record, PPC clinic database, and Cancer Registry. The differences in frequency and addressed domains were analyzed by demographics, visit type, diagnosis group, and proximity to EOL. Across 351 patients, 1919 outpatient PPC visits occurred. Median domains were higher in visits <90 days vs. 91+ days from EOL (12.0 vs. 10.0; p < 0.0001); pain and hospice collaboration were particularly discussed closer to EOL. Psychological symptoms like anxiety (30.7% vs. 21.1%; p < 0.001) were addressed more in follow-ups than initial visits. Compared to brain tumor or leukemia/lymphoma visits, solid tumor visits addressed more symptom management subdomains, especially pain (79.9%; p < 0.0001). The scope of PPC practice is broad and varied. Each visit encompasses many subdomains, the most common being care coordination with oncology teams and helping patients/families cope with the disease. More domains were addressed in solid tumor visits and near EOL.

Overview

  • The study aimed to understand the scope of pediatric palliative care practice during visits for children with cancer and their families.
  • The researchers retrospectively analyzed data from 351 patients with cancer seen in a PPC clinic between 2017 and 2022.
  • The primary objective was to understand the content of PPC visits within pediatric oncology and identify trends in the frequency and addressed domains.

Comparative Analysis & Findings

  • The study found that more domains were addressed in visits closer to end-of-life (EOL), with pain and hospice collaboration being particularly discussed.
  • Psychological symptoms like anxiety were addressed more in follow-up visits than initial visits.
  • Solid tumor visits addressed more symptom management subdomains, especially pain, compared to brain tumor or leukemia/lymphoma visits.

Implications and Future Directions

  • The study highlights the importance of PPC in pediatric oncology and the need for further research to understand the nuances of PPC practice.
  • Future studies could explore the specific needs of patients with different diagnoses and the impact of PPC on patient outcomes.
  • Hospitals could consider implementing PPC services tailored to the needs of patients with solid tumors or other specific diagnoses.