Abstract

Practice guidelines recommend early consideration for palliative care for patients with advanced malignancies, and there has been limited research regarding the use of palliative care for patients with advanced bladder cancer. Our aim is to describe the rate and determinants of the use of palliative care consultation for patients treated with radical cystectomy at our institution. A retrospective review was performed to identify patients who underwent cystectomy for bladder cancer between September 2014 and June 2019 at our institution. Our primary outcome was receipt of palliative care, defined as receiving a palliative care consult. We tested for associations between factors and our outcome of interest, and then estimated the impact on various determinants of palliative care use by fitting a multivariable logistic regression model. Over the study period, 294 patients underwent radical cystectomy. Of those patients, 29 (9.9%) received palliative care. Mean time from surgery to palliative care consult was 11.4 months. Palliative care consults were initiated by urologists in 32.1% of cases. On multivariable analysis, patients were more likely to receive palliative care if they had pT3+ disease (P < 0.001), were readmitted after surgery (P = 0.028), or had any major complication after surgery (P = 0.025). Rates of palliative care consults in patients with advanced bladder cancer at our institution are higher than other population-based estimates nationally. The majority of palliative care consults were requested by medical oncologists, highlighting an opportunity for educational initiatives for urologic oncologists to promote earlier consideration of palliative care referrals.

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