Palliative care for children with central nervous system tumors: results of a Spanish multicenter study

Title

Palliative care for children with central nervous system tumors: results of a Spanish multicenter study

Creator

Perez-Torres LM; Navarro-Marchena L; de Noriega I; Morey OM; Solano-Paez P; Rubio PE; Garrido CC; Garcia AM; Tallon GM; Huidobro LB; Portugal RR; Lopez IB; Lassaletta A; Morgenstern IA; Cruz MO; Valero AL; Llort SA; Gros SL; Marquez VC; Moreno L; Quiroga-Cantero E

Publisher

Clinical and Translational Oncology

Date

2023

Subject

Central Nervous System; child; Palliative Care; childhood cancer; article; controlled study; female; human; major clinical study; male; retrospective study; preschool child; palliative therapy; medulloblastoma; cancer patient; school child; multicenter study; surgery; communication disorder; motor dysfunction; opiate; sedation; central nervous system tumor; place of death; hospital mortality; dexamethasone; antiemetic agent; pontine glioma; asthenia; Central Nervous System Neoplasms

Description

Background: Brain tumors represent the most common cause of cancer-related death in children. Few studies concerning the palliative phase in children with brain tumors are available. Objective(s): (i) To describe the palliative phase in children with brain tumors; (ii) to determine whether the use of palliative sedation (PS) depends on the place of death, the age of the patient, or if they received specific palliative care (PC). Method(s): Retrospective multicenter study between 2010 and 2021, including children from one month to 18 years, who had died of a brain tumor. Result(s): 228 patients (59.2% male) from 10 Spanish institutions were included. Median age at diagnosis was 5 years (IQR 2-9) and median age at death was 7 years (IQR 4-11). The most frequent tumors were medulloblastoma (25.4%) and diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) (24.1%). Median number of antineoplastic regimens were 2 (range 0-5 regimens). During palliative phase, 52.2% of the patients were attended by PC teams, while 47.8% were cared exclusively by pediatric oncology teams. Most common concerns included motor deficit (93.4%) and asthenia (87.5%) and communication disorders (89.8%). Most frequently prescribed supportive drugs were antiemetics (83.6%), opioids (81.6%), and dexamethasone (78.5%). PS was administered to 48.7% patients. Most of them died in the hospital (85.6%), while patients who died at home required PS less frequently (14.4%) (p =.01). Conclusion(s): Children dying from CNS tumors have specific needs during palliative phase. The optimal indication of PS depended on the center experience although, in our series, it was also influenced by the place of death.Copyright © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Federacion de Sociedades Espanolas de Oncologia (FESEO).

Rights

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Citation List Month

2023 SE3 - Oncology

Citation

Perez-Torres LM; Navarro-Marchena L; de Noriega I; Morey OM; Solano-Paez P; Rubio PE; Garrido CC; Garcia AM; Tallon GM; Huidobro LB; Portugal RR; Lopez IB; Lassaletta A; Morgenstern IA; Cruz MO; Valero AL; Llort SA; Gros SL; Marquez VC; Moreno L; Quiroga-Cantero E, “Palliative care for children with central nervous system tumors: results of a Spanish multicenter study,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 27, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/19366.