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Hospital Admission of Cancer Patients: Avoidable Practice or Necessary Care?

BACKGROUND: Cancer patients are frequently admitted to hospital due to acute conditions or refractory symptoms. This occurs through the emergency departments and requires medical oncologists to take an active role. The use of acute-care hospital increases in the last months of life. PATIENTS AND MET...

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Autores principales: Numico, Gianmauro, Cristofano, Antonella, Mozzicafreddo, Alessandro, Cursio, Olga Elisabetta, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Courthod, Giulia, Trogu, Antonio, Malossi, Alessandra, Cucchi, Mariella, Sirotovà, Zuzana, Alvaro, Maria Rosa, Stella, Anna, Grasso, Fulvia, Spinazzé, Silvia, Silvestris, Nicola
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4374858/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25812117
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120827
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author Numico, Gianmauro
Cristofano, Antonella
Mozzicafreddo, Alessandro
Cursio, Olga Elisabetta
Franco, Pierfrancesco
Courthod, Giulia
Trogu, Antonio
Malossi, Alessandra
Cucchi, Mariella
Sirotovà, Zuzana
Alvaro, Maria Rosa
Stella, Anna
Grasso, Fulvia
Spinazzé, Silvia
Silvestris, Nicola
author_facet Numico, Gianmauro
Cristofano, Antonella
Mozzicafreddo, Alessandro
Cursio, Olga Elisabetta
Franco, Pierfrancesco
Courthod, Giulia
Trogu, Antonio
Malossi, Alessandra
Cucchi, Mariella
Sirotovà, Zuzana
Alvaro, Maria Rosa
Stella, Anna
Grasso, Fulvia
Spinazzé, Silvia
Silvestris, Nicola
author_sort Numico, Gianmauro
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Cancer patients are frequently admitted to hospital due to acute conditions or refractory symptoms. This occurs through the emergency departments and requires medical oncologists to take an active role. The use of acute-care hospital increases in the last months of life. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We aimed to describe the admissions to a medical oncology inpatient service within a 16-month period with respect to patients and tumor characteristics, and the outcome of the hospital stay. RESULTS: 672 admissions of 454 patients were analysed. The majority of admissions were urgent (74.1%), and were due to uncontrolled symptoms (79.6%). Among the chief complaints, dyspnoea occurred in 15.7%, pain in 15.2%, and neurological symptoms in 14.5%. The majority of the hospitalizations resulted in discharge to home (60.6%); in 26.5% the patient died and in 11.0% was transferred to a hospice. Admissions due to symptoms correlated with a longer hospital stay and a higher incidence of in-hospital death. CONCLUSION: We suggest that hospital use is not necessarily a sign of inappropriately aggressive care: inpatient care is probably an unavoidable step in the cancer trajectory. Optimization of inpatient supportive procedures should be a specific task of modern medical oncology.
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spelling pubmed-43748582015-04-04 Hospital Admission of Cancer Patients: Avoidable Practice or Necessary Care? Numico, Gianmauro Cristofano, Antonella Mozzicafreddo, Alessandro Cursio, Olga Elisabetta Franco, Pierfrancesco Courthod, Giulia Trogu, Antonio Malossi, Alessandra Cucchi, Mariella Sirotovà, Zuzana Alvaro, Maria Rosa Stella, Anna Grasso, Fulvia Spinazzé, Silvia Silvestris, Nicola PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Cancer patients are frequently admitted to hospital due to acute conditions or refractory symptoms. This occurs through the emergency departments and requires medical oncologists to take an active role. The use of acute-care hospital increases in the last months of life. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We aimed to describe the admissions to a medical oncology inpatient service within a 16-month period with respect to patients and tumor characteristics, and the outcome of the hospital stay. RESULTS: 672 admissions of 454 patients were analysed. The majority of admissions were urgent (74.1%), and were due to uncontrolled symptoms (79.6%). Among the chief complaints, dyspnoea occurred in 15.7%, pain in 15.2%, and neurological symptoms in 14.5%. The majority of the hospitalizations resulted in discharge to home (60.6%); in 26.5% the patient died and in 11.0% was transferred to a hospice. Admissions due to symptoms correlated with a longer hospital stay and a higher incidence of in-hospital death. CONCLUSION: We suggest that hospital use is not necessarily a sign of inappropriately aggressive care: inpatient care is probably an unavoidable step in the cancer trajectory. Optimization of inpatient supportive procedures should be a specific task of modern medical oncology. Public Library of Science 2015-03-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4374858/ /pubmed/25812117 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120827 Text en © 2015 Numico et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Numico, Gianmauro
Cristofano, Antonella
Mozzicafreddo, Alessandro
Cursio, Olga Elisabetta
Franco, Pierfrancesco
Courthod, Giulia
Trogu, Antonio
Malossi, Alessandra
Cucchi, Mariella
Sirotovà, Zuzana
Alvaro, Maria Rosa
Stella, Anna
Grasso, Fulvia
Spinazzé, Silvia
Silvestris, Nicola
Hospital Admission of Cancer Patients: Avoidable Practice or Necessary Care?
title Hospital Admission of Cancer Patients: Avoidable Practice or Necessary Care?
title_full Hospital Admission of Cancer Patients: Avoidable Practice or Necessary Care?
title_fullStr Hospital Admission of Cancer Patients: Avoidable Practice or Necessary Care?
title_full_unstemmed Hospital Admission of Cancer Patients: Avoidable Practice or Necessary Care?
title_short Hospital Admission of Cancer Patients: Avoidable Practice or Necessary Care?
title_sort hospital admission of cancer patients: avoidable practice or necessary care?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4374858/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25812117
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120827
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