Abstract
336 Background: Patients with gastrointestinal (GI) malignancies experience a high burden of disease-related symptoms and treatment side effects. We established an integrated GI oncology and palliative care (PC) clinic in which a PC physician is co-located with the oncology team and can provide timely response to patient distress and facilitate communication with the interdisciplinary palliative care team. Yet, even in the integrated clinic, patient symptoms were unreliably assessed, leading to missed opportunities to address patient suffering. Between October 2023 and January 2024 for patients seen in-person in the integrated clinic for oncology or PC visits, the median rate of symptom documentation was 45%. Emotional, financial, and spiritual distress documentation rates were lowest. We hypothesized that by implementing a systematic, comprehensive patient-reported symptom assessment tool, we could increase the detection and documentation of symptoms, and in turn, improve communication around patient distress and timely response to symptoms. Methods: We measured the rate of symptom documentation (primary outcome) and the use of a patient-reported symptom assessment tool for adults with GI cancers seen in-person in the integrated clinic in Spring 2024. Based on the Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale (ESAS) and expert consensus, we determined which symptoms were most important to identify. Documentation rates were assessed via manual chart review of visit notes and flowsheet data. Prospective post-intervention data (March to May 2024) were compared to retrospective pre-intervention baseline data (October 2023 to January 2024). Interventions included modification of the ESAS to include GI oncology-specific symptoms, implementation of the tool in paper format to encourage patient-clinician communication, frequent staff education and feedback sessions, creation and dissemination of a resource guide for clinicians to respond to identified distress, and patient satisfaction surveys. Results: 126 patients were included in the study (31 pre-intervention and 95 post-intervention). During the post-intervention period, the median rate of symptom documentation increased from 45% to 83% and the median rate of ESAS survey completion increased from 9% to 68%. Documentation of financial and spiritual distress increased from 13% to 71%, for both, and documentation of emotional distress increased from 35% to 72%. On satisfaction surveys (N=20), most patients reported the tool was helpful in sharing their symptoms (70%), was easy to read and understand (100%), and that their clinician was engaged in addressing their symptoms (67%). Conclusions: The implementation of a patient-reported symptom assessment tool in an integrated GI oncology/PC clinic increased documentation of important symptoms, potentially increasing clinician awareness of patient distress.
Published Version
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