Abstract

e24146 Background: Primary central nervous system (CNS) tumors are a diverse group of neoplasms that can vary greatly in terms of their cellular origin, histological features, clinical behavior, and prognosis. Many diagnoses leave patients with a poor prognosis and an impaired quality of life. Palliative care (PC) has long been used as a means to improve quality of life and symptoms associated with debilitating malignancies; however, its use in CNS tumors is not well characterized. Yet, the plethora of life-altering symptoms such as gait impairment, cognitive decline, motor deficits, and seizures provide a need for further multidisciplinary approaches to integrating PC with primary CNS tumor diagnoses. We aim to assess factors that influence the receipt of PC in the current data on central nervous system tumor patients and assess differences in overall survival. Methods: This study retrospectively evaluated the use of PC in patients with single primary malignant central nervous system tumors (gliomas, neuroepitheliomatous neoplasms, and meningiomas) diagnosed and recorded in the National Cancer Database (NCDB) between 2004 and 2020. Patients were identified by ICD-O-3 coding and patients with other malignancies were excluded. Multivariable logistic regression was performed to evaluate associations between patient characteristics and the use of PC, and Kaplan-Meier curves with log-rank analysis were used to determine survival for each group. Results: After excluding patients without information on utilization of PC, a total of 9295 patients with primary CNS tumors were considered in the final analysis. Overall, 1.31% received palliative care. From patients receiving palliative care, 81.1-93.4% received non-curative treatment with surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, or a combination of one or more of these modalities with additional pain management. Odds of receiving palliative care were decreased in black patients, patients who received non-palliative surgical treatment, patients with a primary tumor site at the optic chiasm, patients with unilateral tumors, and patients with private, medicaid, other government, or unknown insurance status. Odds of receiving palliative care were increased with increased Charlson-Deyo Score, in patients receiving non-palliative systemic or radiation treatment, and patients with a primary site at the spinal dura. Utilization of PC was associated with a decreased 1-year and 5-year overall survival. Conclusions: PC use in CNS tumors was influenced by tumor location, treatment type, insurance status, patient race, and comorbidity index. This study demonstrates the areas in which use of PC utilization is still lacking across a diverse set of CNS tumors and patients. Further exploration is needed into the integration of palliative care broadly across these malignancies as it still remains low despite the abundance of quality-of-life altering symptoms.

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