Symptom burden in malignant and non-malignant disease on admission to a palliative care unit.

BMJ Support Palliat Care

Department of Palliative Care, The Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • There is a growing understanding that patients with non-malignant diseases experience a similar level of physical and emotional symptom burden as those with cancer, but there is a lack of direct data comparing these groups.
  • A study involving 186 patients in a palliative care unit explored differences in symptom burden and found that non-malignant patients were generally older and more functionally impaired, while patients with cancer reported more severe symptoms initially.
  • After adjusting for various factors, the study concluded that the overall symptom burden was not significantly different between the two groups, indicating the need for further research on the palliative care requirements for non-malignant disease patients.

Article Abstract

Background: There is increasing recognition that patients with non-malignant diseases have comparable physical and psychosocial symptom burden to patients with cancer. There is currently limited data directly comparing symptom burden between these patient groups.

Objective: To investigate differences in symptom burden between patients with malignant and non-malignant conditions admitted to a palliative care unit (PCU).

Method: A cross-sectional study involving 186 patients admitted to a PCU was undertaken. Patients were dichotomised into malignant or non-malignant disease categories. Symptom burden at admission was assessed using the Symptom Assessment Scale and Palliative Care Problem Severity Score. Group differences in symptoms were analysed using univariate and multivariate approaches.

Results: One hundred patients (53.8%) had cancer, with upper gastrointestinal the most common type (18.0%). Among the 86 patients with non-malignant disease, neurological conditions were most prevalent (40.7%). Patients admitted with non-malignant diseases were older, more functionally impaired and more likely to be deteriorating or terminal. A malignant diagnosis was associated with a higher likelihood of clinician-assessed pain, patient-assessed pain, fatigue, psychological/spiritual symptoms and other symptoms. However, when adjusted for confounders, disease category ceased to be a significant predictor of symptom burden. Younger patients experienced worse pain and patients in terminal phase experienced less symptom burden.

Conclusion: Symptom burden was similar between patients with malignant and non-malignant disease after adjustment for confounders. Further research is needed to understand the palliative care needs of patients with non-malignant disease.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjspcare-2018-001560DOI Listing

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