Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Advance Care Planning: A Way to Improve End-of-life Care
Communication about end-of-life issues is often suboptimal. A way to improve the quality of end-of-life care is Advance Care Planning (ACP). ACP is a discussion between an incurable ill patient and the health professionals about preferences for end-of-life care. In Denmark, there is no tradition of systematic communication with patients about end-of-life care. The aim is to investigate how ACP can be beneficial among incurable ill patients treated in an outpatient context and if the concept is feasible in a Danish context. The study is designed as a prospective randomised controlled trial. Patients from relevant departments will be included and randomised in two groups: one receiving usual care and the other receiving usual care and ACP. Data will be collected from Electronic Patient Files and from questionnaires. If ACP is effective, it will improve the quality of end-of-life care for patients and their families and reduce the psychological distress in the bereaved relatives.
Study Design The study is designed as a prospective randomised controlled trial. Eligible
patients from the departments of oncology, cardiology and respiratory medicine at Aarhus
University Hospital will be included in the study and randomised in two groups: one
receiving usual care and the other receiving usual care and ACP. Patients will be recruited
from one department at a time, allowing the recruitment period to be up to six months for
each department. Because patients with terminal cardiac and respiratory diseases are known
to have more unpredictable life expectancy than cancer patients, initial recruitment will be
from cardiology and respiratory medicine departments, respectively.9 This procedure will
enhance the possibility of the estimated number of deaths in all three diagnose groups to be
registered within the study period (see power calculation below). The research group has a
long and ongoing close cooperation with the departments mentioned and collaboration has been
established.
Practical Execution The researcher (the applicant) will be provided with a list of patients
who will attend the outpatient clinic the following day. Using an identification tool (see
Appendix 1) the researcher will assess the patients, identifying those patients anticipated
to be in need of palliative and supportive care. Patients` data are found in Electronic
Patient Files (EPJ). After the patients have been seen by staff in the outpatient's clinic,
the researcher will ask the doctor in the clinic whether he/she would be surprised if this
patient died within the next 6-12 months. (i.e. "The surprise Question"). 10 If the answer
is no, the patient will be enrolled in the study. Within two days hereafter the patient will
be contacted by mail and later by telephone. Information about ACP will be given written and
verbally. If the patient accepts, informed written consent is obtained. Returning consent
form blank or not responding after two reminders will be considered a decline. Patients will
be randomised by usual standards; non-research staff will carry out the randomisation using
sealed envelopes containing allocation cards assigned by random numbers. All patients
included in the study will receive a questionnaire concerning quality of care (see
questionnaire data). The patients are also asked to point out a close relative who is likely
to accept participation. Participating relatives will be approached in order to fill in
questionnaires during the patient`s trajectory and in the bereavement period (see
questionnaire data).
Intervention Patients in the intervention group will be offered a formal ACP discussion with
the researcher. This will be conducted as a discussion between the researcher and the
patient based on the Respecting Patient Choices model.11 This programme, developed at the
Austin Hospital in Melbourne, Australia, is based on the Respecting Choices programme and
involves a coordinated approach to ACP whereby facilitators, in collaboration with the
treating doctor, assist patients and their families to reflect on the patient's goals,
values, and beliefs, and to discuss and document their future choices about health care.
Patients are encouraged to appoint a proxy and to document their preferences about
end-of-life care; including the preferences for life prolonging treatments and
cardiopulmonary resuscitation recorded on an Advance Care Plan (see Appendix 2). Whenever
possible, treating doctors will participate in the discussion to ensure that the patients
understand their illness, treatment options, and likely prognosis. The discussion will be
audio taped for scientific use and the ACP will be documented in EPJ. The discussion will
take place at the hospital or at the patient's home. With the acceptance of the patient, the
general practitioner and the community nurse will receive a copy of the ACP documents.
Patients will be encouraged to include their closest relative in the ACP discussion. The aim
is to complete the ACP discussion within two weeks after the identification of patients in
the outpatient`s clinic. Consistent with usual practice patients in the control group will
receive usual medical and psychosocial care but not a formalised ACP discussion.
Data Collection Demographic data: will be collected at enrolment and will include age, sex,
education, children living at home, admission diagnosis, the existence of a form requesting
no resuscitation, whether the patient has a proxy, and whether the patient already has any
EPJ documented preferences on end-of-life care, including life prolonging treatment or
cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Data will be collected from EPJ and in the questionnaires,
respectively.
Questionnaire Data A thorough literature review of existing, validated tools will be
conducted. Accordingly the questionnaires will be composed by validated and well-established
questionnaires and supplemented by ad hoc questions when no existing questionnaires are
available. Translation and adaption as well as pilot testing in accordance with
international guidelines will be performed before use. All patients will be requested to
fill in a questionnaire three to four weeks after inclusion and the relatives are similarly
asked to evaluate the care at this time.12 In those cases where the patient dies within the
study period, the bereaved relatives will receive a questionnaire evaluating the levels of
stress, anxiety and depression as well as a questionnaire concerning the quality of the
patient`s end-of-life care and preferences for place of care and death.13-15
Power Calculation Based on the existing literature, we expect that the proportion of
patients whose end-of-life preferences were known will be 15 % and that an increase to 65 %
would represent a clinically meaningful effect. To achieve 90 % power to detect a difference
in the primary outcome between groups with a certainty of 95 %, we estimated that 22 deaths
would be required in each group, i.e. 44 deaths in total. It is therefore planned to
continue the inclusion period until at least 22 deaths are observed in each group among
patients enrolled. In a similar study, the population included patients had an average
lifespan of 3.5 months the time of inclusion until death and 86 % of included patients died
during the study period which was 20 months.16 In order to observe 44 deaths, an estimated
inclusion of 90 patients is necessary. The estimated inclusion period will be approximately
18 months.
Perspectives The project is an integrated part of a large research program within the
palliative field. The project is, with its focus on creating better trajectories and better
treatment for patients throughout the end of their terminal illness, highly relevant. The
ongoing development of palliative care and the lack of evidence that characterises the area
challenge the health care even more while also dealing with the utilisation of limited
financial resources. If ACP is effective in a Danish context, it will improve the
end-of-life care for patients and their families and reduce the psychological distress in
the bereaved relatives. ACP may therefore contribute to a more rational use of health care
resources as well as being a tool to help patients have their preferences met.
Ethics Terminally ill patients are a vulnerable group to involve in research. However, the
research group has positive experiences with involving patients and relatives in this kind
of research. The patients' main motivation to participate has been to help others in similar
situation. It should also be noted that no patients are treated less favourably than the
current standard procedure in healthcare. It is optional for patients and their relatives in
the intervention group, whether they wish to participate in the ACP or not.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
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