High Symptom Burden in Patients Receiving Radiotherapy and Factors Associated with Being Offered an Intervention
Allison Rau, Demetra Yannitsos, Petra Grendarova, Siwei Qi, Linda Watson, Lisa Barbera

TL;DR
This study examines how often patients receiving radiotherapy with high symptom burden are offered interventions and identifies factors influencing this decision.
Contribution
The study identifies specific factors and symptoms associated with being offered an intervention during radiotherapy.
Findings
75% of patients with high symptom complexity were offered an intervention.
Medications were the most common intervention offered.
Pain, nausea, shortness of breath, and anxiety were strongly associated with being offered an intervention.
Abstract
Patient report outcomes are commonly collected during oncology visits to elicit symptom burden and guide management. We aimed to determine the frequency of intervention for patients undergoing radiotherapy with high symptom complexity scores and identify which factors are associated with being offered an intervention. A retrospective chart audit was completed of adult patients with cancer who had at least one radiotherapy appointment and were assigned a high symptom complexity. A total of 200 patients were included; 150 (75.0%) patients were offered an intervention for the main symptom. The most offered intervention was medications. Multivariable logistic regression showed factors associated with being offered an intervention were the following: symptom score of 9 (OR = 9.56, 95% CI 1.64–62.8) and 10 (OR = 7.90, 95% CI 1.69–38.2); palliative intent radiation (OR 3.87, 96% CI 1.46–11.1);…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer survivorship and care · Management of metastatic bone disease · Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
