Impact of early palliative care intervention in autologous bone marrow transplantation: feasibility of a multicentric study
María Argüello-Marina, Marta Callejas-Charavía, Beatriz Merchán-Muñoz, Daniel Gainza-Miranda, Agustina Rico-Zampetti, Raquel Pérez-Maganto, Gustavo Ruiz-Ares, Patricia García-Ramírez, Dunia de Miguel-Llorente, Julio García-Suárez

TL;DR
This study shows that early palliative care during bone marrow transplants improves patients' quality of life, reduces pain, and shortens hospital stays.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the feasibility and benefits of integrating palliative care early in autologous bone marrow transplantation.
Findings
Patients receiving palliative care had significantly better quality of life scores at Days +7 and +21.
Pain management was better in the palliative care group, with fewer opioid uses and reduced need for parenteral nutrition.
Hospital stays were shorter for patients in the palliative care group.
Abstract
This prospective multicentre study evaluates the impact of Palliative Care Unit (PCU) intervention (Experimental Group, EG), during autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (AHSCT) on quality of life (QoL), symptom control and healthcare resource use compared to standard practice (Control Group, CG). We used validated scales on Days 0 (stem cell infusion), + 7 (bone marrow aplasia, acute symptoms) and + 21 (aplasia recovery). In 40 patients (20 EG/ 20 CG: 45%/25% female, median age 57.5/59), QoL differed significantly at Day + 7 (EG: median 0.50; CG: -63.00; p < 0.001) and Day + 21 (EG: -2.00; CG: -129.00; p < 0.001). On Day 0, mean FACT-BMT scores were CG/EG: 131/ 89.35, reflecting the pre-transplant intervention of the PCU in EG patients. For pain (EG median 0.00, CG median 2.50; p = 0.01), 45% EG patients used opioids on day 0 (mean 38.5 mg morphine/day/patient). Reduced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues · Childhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life · Cancer survivorship and care
