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Cancer Research Conference ; 83(5 Supplement), 2022.
Article in English | EMBASE | ID: covidwho-2260899

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women and the leading cause of cancerrelated death in women worldwide. The high prevalence of physical and psychosocial suffering among breast cancer patients and their families justifies the need for an early interdisciplinary approach by a palliative care team. The effectiveness of early palliative care for patients with advanced cancer has been demonstrated in many studies. Early referral to outpatient palliative care services improves symptom control, reduces suffering and improves quality of end-of-life care. Aim(s): Evaluation of referral patterns of metastatic breast cancer patients to the outpatient embedded palliative care team. Method(s): We retrospectively retrieved data from electronic medical records of patients who were treated at a private community oncology practice in Brazil who died from metastatic breast cancer during the years of 2018 until 2021.We evaluated the patient's follow-up time by the palliative care team (follow-up > 12 weeks or not) and the year of referral to the service (pre-2020 vs 2020 and later) associated to the service referral type: Late referral (more than 8 weeks of metastatic diagnosis) or early referral. Each group was followed-up by cancer physicians and after referral was also followed-up by a palliative care multidisciplinary team who regularly evaluated cancer patients during their treatments at outpatient setting. During COVID-19 pandemic, some patients were evaluated by telemedicine appointments. We performed univariate comparisons analysis by Fisher's Exact Test. p < 0.1 was deemed as statistically significant. Result(s): Of the 211 patients whose data were assessed, 99 patients were referred to Palliative Care team before 2020 and 112 patients after 2020. 13.1% of patients pre-2020 received early palliative care versus 33.9% of patients in the post-2020 referral group, resulting in a 3.37-fold odds of an early palliative care integration after 2020 (OR 3.37, CI95: 1.61 - 7.45;p< 0.001). Overall, 30.4% of longer follow-up patients were an early referral versus 19.3% of the shorter follow-up, resulting in an 82% greater chance (OR 1.82, CI: 0.92-3.63;p< 0.1) of prolonged assistance with early referral. Conclusion(s): In this analysis, early palliative care integration for patients with metastatic breast cancer has increased after 2019 despite the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to prolonged time of accompaniment by the multidisciplinary palliative care team. This suggests that even in the face of this challenging moment, a mature and consolidated service is offered by the palliative care team. Also, according to previous data in literature, prematurely integration show signs of correlation with better quality of life and death, supporting early palliative care for this group of patients. However, further work is needed to examine the effect of this care model in our cohort.

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