Abstract

15 Background: Early documentation of end-of-life (EOL) preferences in patients with advanced cancer is associated with less aggressive EOL care, however, several barriers to having these discussions exist. Evaluating practitioner-level barriers in the ambulatory oncology setting by adapting an existing survey from the critical care and internal medicine contexts was deemed important. Methods: The previously published “DECIDE” survey was modified to the ambulatory oncology setting and pilot tested. Surveys were then distributed to oncologists in Ontario, Canada via paper and secure online methods. The survey asked physicians to rank on a numerical scale the importance of various barriers to having EOL discussions with patients and their families. Trends were established using descriptive statistics. Analysis by respondent demographic was not completed due to small numbers. Results: A total of 30 out of 79 participants responded to the survey, for a response rate of 38%. Respondents generally ranked patient and family related barriers highest. For instance, patient difficulty accepting prognosis or indicating a desire to be “aggressive” was rated by 69% of respondents as an extremely or very important barrier to initiating EOL discussions. Sixty-three percent of respondents also rated patients’ inflated expectations of further cancer treatment benefit as a very or extremely important barrier to discontinuing active cancer-directed therapies. Patient or family refusal for referral was rated by 47% of respondents as a very or extremely important barrier to early palliative care referral. The majority ( > 85%) of respondents were very or extremely willing to initiate, lead, and finalize the EOL discussions with patients and their families. Conclusions: Oncologists in this study ranked patient and family related barriers to having EOL discussions above all other barriers. Further work is required to better understand such perceived barriers, and compare them to patient preferences and perceptions about EOL planning and cancer care at the end of life. Targeted interventions to address these barriers could then be developed.

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