Abstract

BackgroundElderly patients with gastrointestinal cancer and mental illness have significant comorbidities that can impact the quality of their care. We investigated the relationship between mental illness and frequent emergency department (ED) use in the last month of life, an indicator for poor end‐of‐life care quality, among elderly patients with gastrointestinal cancers.MethodsWe used SEER‐Medicare data to identify decedents with gastrointestinal cancers who were diagnosed between 2004 and 2013 and were at least 66 years old at time of diagnosis (median age: 80 years, range: 66–117 years). We evaluated the association between having a diagnosis of depression, bipolar disorders, psychotic disorders, anxiety, dementia, and/or substance use disorders and ED use in the last 30 days of life using logistic regression models.ResultsOf 160,367 patients included, 54,661 (34.1%) had a mental illness diagnosis between one year prior to cancer diagnosis and death. Patients with mental illness were more likely to have > 1 ED visit in the last 30 days of life (15.6% vs. 13.3%, p < 0.01). ED use was highest among patients with substance use (17.7%), bipolar (16.5%), and anxiety disorders (16.4%). Patients with mental illness who were male, younger, non‐white, residing in lower income areas, and with higher comorbidity were more likely to have multiple end‐of‐life ED visits. Patients who received outpatient treatment from a mental health professional were less likely to have multiple end‐of‐life ED visits (adjusted odds ratio 0.82, 95% confidence interval 0.78–0.87).ConclusionsIn elderly patients with gastrointestinal cancers, mental illness is associated with having multiple end‐of‐life ED visits. Increasing access to mental health services may improve quality of end‐of‐life care in this vulnerable population.

Highlights

  • We examined risk factors associated with multiple end-o­f-l­ife emergency department (ED) visits among patients with mental illness (Table 3)

  • Risk factors included living in a lower income census tract and having a higher Charlson comorbidity index

  • End-­of-l­ife ED visits were associated with pancreatic, hepatic, esophageal, biliary, small bowel cancer, and other gastrointestinal cancers compared to colorectal cancer

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Patients with gastrointestinal cancers appear to visit the ED more frequently than those with other types of cancers.[19] defining the relationship between mental illness and end-­of-­life ED use in this population is vital for both identifying disparities in care and establishing effective interventions for high-r­ isk patients. We included patients diagnosed with mental illness prior to cancer diagnosis since there is growing evidence that having a pre-e­ xisting mental illness can impact the quality of cancer care patients receive, which, in turn, may impact quality of end-o­ f-­life care.[16] We identified patients with depression, bipolar disorders, psychotic disorders, anxiety, dementia, and substance use disorders (Table S1). Patients with more than one mental illness were included in all applicable categories

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ETHICAL APPROVAL STATEMENT
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