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Prostate Cancer Specialist Aims to Improve End-of-Life Care

Adding Treatment to Hospice

January 12, 1999 Cancer patients may reach a time when they are faced with a very difficult choice—whether to take part in experimental research or enter a hospice program. Whichever they ultimately choose, they lose the benefits of the other choice.
      Dr. Kenneth PientaWith this in mind, Kenneth J. Pienta M. D., a nationally recognized prostate cancer researcher at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center, will lead a study that aims to improve the quality of life of terminally ill patients while helping them live as long as possible.
      The three-year study, called the Palliative Care Project, challenges the current model of medical care in which terminally ill patients must choose between continued medical treatment from conventional health care providers and the supportive benefits of hospice care. Patients in this new program will be enrolled in hospice at the beginning of their treatment, allowing them the benefits of both hospice care and cutting-edge medical therapy.
      At present, when terminally ill patients enter an experimental medical study or receive palliative treatment, they typically spend all but the last week or two of life receiving treatment. Then, when all life-prolonging options are used up, they are moved into hospice care. The move to hospice care, coming in the final days of the patient's life, often is accompanied by feelings of abandonment on the part of patients, families, and health care-givers, the researchers say.
      On the other hand, if patients choose hospice care early, under the present system they sign away the chance to actively control the disease, for example by choosing chemotherapy or radiation as methods of alleviating pain from bone metastases.
Prostrate Cancer 1 of 4 Diseases Chosen for Study
      The research team will evaluate 160 patients in each of four disease groups: advanced prostate cancer, advanced breast cancer, advanced lung cancer and advanced congestive heart failure. Subjects taking part in the study typically will have a life expectancy of approximately six months.
      "Preliminary studies suggest that integrating hospice care with traditional treatment improves quality of life for terminally ill patients and may also be more cost-effective than the current system of care," says lead researcher Dr.Pienta, professor of internal medicine and surgery in the U-M Health System. "Under this program, you can enter hospice early in the treatment cycle and still receive medicines, such as chemotherapy, that will relieve symptoms and potentially help you live longer." Pienta will direct the new program along with co-investigator John Finn, M.D., executive medical director of Hospice of Michigan.
      Finn, who is an expert in hospice and palliative care, will provide direct patient care to the homebound and supervise the training of all clinical personnel on the study. "In this study, we will provide patients with the best of both worlds—state-of-the-art treatment, plus the best in palliative care. We think it will significantly improve the quality of end-of-life care for terminally ill patients," Finn said.
      Hospice staff are on-call 24-hours-a-day and make weekly in-home visits to the patient. This allows people who take part in the study to continue many of their treatments in the comfort of their homes. As a result, patients do not have to come to the emergency room or be hospitalized for many aspects of their care. The researchers hope to prove that introducing hospice care early in the treatment cycle will lower the cost of care.
      Hospice patients are cared for by an interdisciplinary team that addresses the physical, emotional and spiritual needs of the patient and the patient's family. Because hospice helps patients and families cope with the advancing illness and the symptoms and fears that accompany it, patients derive the greatest benefit when they are enrolled in a hospice program early in the disease cycle.
      Medicare and most insurance companies generally do not pay for hospice services until all life-prolonging options have been exhausted or refused. It is hoped results of this new study can provide valuable data to regional and national health care planners about costs of merging life-prolonging medical care with hospice and palliative care.

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Urologist Dr. Kenneth J. Pienta, M.D. is Professor of Internal Medicine and Surgery at The University of Michigan Health System's Comprehensive Cancer Center.
      The study he is leading with Dr. Finn is funded, in part, by a three-year, $1.35-million grant from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, which offers a total of 12 million dollars in grants for a new national program called Promoting Excellence in End of Life Care.
      The Foundation runs the Last Acts Campaign to improve end-of-life care. Last Acts has given Dr. Pienta $450,000 to make a website promoting his research.
      The Hospice of Michigan, the nation's largest nonprofit provider of hospice care, serves more than 900 patients per day in communities across Michigan.
      Investigators at St. John Health System and Providence Hospital are partners in this study.

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January 25, 1999
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