Background
Pancreatic cancer is one of the worldwide leading causes of cancer-related death [
1], and pancreatic cancer is the fourth most common type of solid tumor in the United States [
1]. Unfortunately, most patients with pancreatic cancer are in the advanced stages, and have a median expected survival period of <8 months [
2]. In addition, patients with terminal pancreatic cancer frequently suffer from weight loss, jaundice, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, back pain, cachexia, esophageal variceal bleeding, and ascites [
2]. Therefore, symptomatic treatment is important for relieving the discomfort that is experienced by these patients.
Hospice care aims to provide supportive care to patients who are in the final stage of a terminal illness [
3]. Supportive care is the treatment given to prevent, control, or relieve complications and side effects and to improve the patient's comfort and quality of life [
4]. Therefore, hospice care focuses on improving the patient’s comfort and quality of life, rather than achieving a cure for their condition. Hospice programs typically use a multidisciplinary approach, which includes the services of doctors, nurses, social workers, and clergy, in order to offer holistic care to patients. Based on this comprehensive care, it has been reported that patients who receive hospice care experience a better quality of life, compared to patients with similar conditions who receive conventional care [
5].
Palliative care is an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problems that are associated with life-threatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other physical, psychosocial, and spiritual problems [
6]. Inpatient palliative care in Taiwan is covered by National Health Insurance (NHI) programs, and is offered by many medical centers (medical facilities that are larger than regional or district hospitals) or school-affiliated hospitals. However, only a small percentage of terminally ill patients ultimately select inpatient palliative care [
7,
8], and the rate of inpatient palliative care use was 12.3 % among patients with cancer who died between 2000 and 2004 [
8]. Furthermore, although the trend of inpatient palliative care use increased from 5.5 % in 2000 to 15.4 % in 2004, the rate of Taiwanese inpatient palliative care use remains far below the rates in Western countries [
7‐
10]. This relatively low usage may be due to individual misconceptions, physician preferences, and/or cultural concerns [
9,
10]. A previous study in a Taiwanese inpatient palliative care unit reported that inpatients with advanced cancer in inpatient palliative care units had a shorter length of stay, compared to inpatients who were treated at acute hospital wards [
11]. Nevertheless, there are no studies that have performed a comprehensive, nationwide comparison of inpatient palliative care and acute hospital care for patients with pancreatic cancer. Therefore, using information from Taiwan’s NHI database, we aimed to compare the patient characteristics, medical procedures, prescriptions, and medical costs for patients with pancreatic cancer who received inpatient palliative care or acute hospital care, and to identify any significant differences between these groups.
Discussion
In this study, we collected comprehensive data from the NHI records of patients with terminal pancreatic cancer, and used these data to compare inpatient palliative care and acute hospital care. Our analysis revealed that the majority of patients with pancreatic cancer were men and had been hospitalized in medical centers. Furthermore, most patients were treated in acute hospital wards. In the inpatient palliative care group, approximately 40 % of patients were treated by family physicians, and these patients had shorter hospital stays, fewer aggressive procedures, and lower medical costs. Furthermore, these patients were prescribed more natural opium alkaloids and benzodiazepine derivatives, compared to the acute hospital care inpatients. However, given the relatively short hospital stays, we could not perform a detailed analysis of the durations for all medical procedures.
In Taiwan, the only available forms of hospice care are inpatient palliative care and home palliative care [
17], and there were 50 hospital-based inpatient palliative care units and 69 home palliative care teams in April 2015 [
18]. The palliative care teams only offer consultations for patients in acute hospital wards. The physicians in acute hospital wards are responsible for all care-related decisions for patients in acute hospital wards. It has been estimated that 13,000 patients with cancer receive these services each year in Taiwan [
19], and inpatient palliative care is available and fully accessible to all healthcare beneficiaries, to whom it is offered at all medical centers and in select regional hospitals, although it is rarely offered in district hospitals. Furthermore, Taiwanese patients with pancreatic cancer are frequently referred to medical centers, which have a full complement of diagnostic facilities and greater treatment capabilities [
20]. These patients can then be transferred to the inpatient palliative care units or acute hospital wards when they become terminally ill. Although sophisticated medical services are rarely used for patients who receive inpatient palliative care or acute hospital care, it is more convenient for patients at medical centers to access these services, compared to inpatients at regional or district hospital. Therefore, patients with terminal pancreatic cancer are more frequently admitted to medical centers, rather than to regional or district hospitals.
Inpatient palliative care is not widely used in Taiwan, and we found that the majority of terminally ill patients with pancreatic cancer elected to receive end-of-life care at acute hospital wards. Several factors might influence the decision to not select inpatient palliative care, such as physician preferences and referral practices, cultural concerns, individual patient choices and circumstances, and public or professional awareness of the benefits of inpatient palliative care [
9,
10,
21,
22]. Unfortunately, in Taiwan, inpatient palliative care units are associated with a negative image (i.e., ‘death wards’), and a strong sense of familial obligation leads families to provide in-home care to sick family members. In addition, caregivers and family members typically prefer life-sustaining treatment for terminally ill patients, and some physicians prefer not to discuss end-of-life issues with their patients [
23]. Therefore, these factors may motivate Taiwanese patients and their families to elect for end-of-life care in acute hospital wards, rather than in inpatient palliative care units.
The basic philosophical tenets of end-of-life care have been rooted in the recognition of an individual’s personal dignity. Therefore, the most common treatment objectives for inpatient palliative care include helping patients die with dignity, alleviating pain and suffering, controlling symptoms, and using less aggressive therapies [
10,
24,
25]. In this study, we found that 84.4 % of the inpatient palliative care patients were prescribed natural opium alkaloids, which is noticeably higher than the prescription rate (72.7 %) in a previous study of inpatient palliative care for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma [
17]. Furthermore, only 56.5 % of the patients in the acute hospital care group were prescribed natural opium alkaloids. However, among patients with pancreatic cancer, pain is a major source of distress [
2], and adequate pain control is the primary priority in terminally ill cases, which may partially explain why the patients in the inpatient palliative care group more frequently received benzodiazepine derivatives (48.2 % vs. 26.8 % in the acute hospital care group). These drugs are an important adjuvant to control pain, and can help treat concomitant psychological disturbances, such as insomnia, anxiety, and depression, according to the World Health Organization’s guide for cancer pain relief [
26]. Moreover, the patients in the inpatient palliative care group used fewer cephalosporins (32.2 % vs. 60.5 %, respectively) and adrenergic or dopaminergic agents (5.8 % vs. 52.9 %, respectively), which is likely because these treatments are typically futile in patients with terminal pancreatic cancer [
27].
There were 4,686 deaths due to pancreatic cancer from 2003 to 2006 [
28]. However, home palliative care is widely used in Taiwan [
18], and many patients were discharged, against their physician’s advice, when they were dying [
29]. Thus, only 854 patients with terminal pancreatic cancer who died in-hospital were included in this study. Nevertheless, our findings indicated that there were significant differences between inpatient palliative care and acute hospital care for patients with terminal pancreatic cancer.
Although we found that inpatient palliative care resulted in significantly shorter hospital stays, there is controversy in the existing literature regarding whether inpatient palliative care leads to shorter or longer hospital stays [
7,
11]. In our study, patients in the palliative care units used fewer aggressive procedures, which may lead to shorter lifespans and shorter hospital stays. However, we also found that inpatient palliative care resulted in lower per-person or daily medical costs, compared to acute hospital care. These findings may be attributable to the patients’ poor general conditions after termination of anticancer treatment, and their rapidly growing pancreatic tumors. Moreover, the treatment of patients’ poor general condition and symptoms of pancreatic cancer are challenging, and typically empirical, in inpatient palliative care units. Therefore, increasing the use of solutions that affect electrolyte balance, solutions for parenteral nutrition, propulsives, electrolyte solutions, cephalosporins, and adrenergic or dopaminergic agents may prolong the lives of some patients. However, prolonging the lives of terminally ill patients, such as the patients in our study, will inevitably prolong their suffering. Therefore, as we found that inpatient palliative care cost less than acute hospital care, the cost-benefit ratio of acute hospital care should be subjected to further evaluation [
25,
30,
31]. Furthermore, we only evaluated patients who were treated during 2003–2006, and the number of Taiwanese inpatient palliative care units has increased from 26 in 2004 to 53 in 2015 [
32]. Therefore, inpatient palliative care has become more accepted by the general public, which further supports its consideration during end-of-life decision-making.
The major strength of this study was its nationwide population-based design, which included a relatively large number of patients with pancreatic cancer. Furthermore, this design facilitated a comprehensive evaluation of the medical behaviors and costs that were associated with inpatient palliative care and acute hospital care. Therefore, the findings of our study provide epidemiological evidence that inpatient palliative care provides a greater amount of palliative care for patients with terminally ill pancreatic cancer and is less expensive than acute hospital care. Thus, these findings may provide the basis for changing traditional Taiwanese perceptions regarding inpatient palliative care, and for promoting end-of-life inpatient palliative care for patients with pancreatic cancer.
This study has several limitations that should be considered when interpreting our findings. First, we could not obtain data regarding the patients’ educational and socioeconomic status, the preferences of the patients and their caregivers, patient life expectancies, and the attitudes of physicians toward inpatient palliative care. However, although only a limited number of covariates were included in the logistic regression model, our propensity-score matching at the patient level provided comparable baseline characteristics between the two groups, which may have eliminated some selection biases. Second, although fewer aggressive procedures and a lower cost burden are desirable factors, such as those observed in the inpatient palliative care group, we were unable to obtain data regarding the patients’ symptom burdens, pain scores, or quality of life measures. Therefore, future research should incorporate quality of life measures to advance our knowledge regarding the effects of inpatient palliative care. Third, eligible patients receive a fixed daily payment from Taiwan NHI for inpatient palliative care [
33], and this payment may influence the observed differences in the use of medications, aggressive procedures, and incurred costs between the two groups.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors’ contributions
All authors fulfilled the criteria for authorship. JPW, CYW, SJH, and CPL conducted the conception and design of the study. SJH and CPL obtained the data. JPW, CYW, YPH, and CPL developed the methodology. IHH and CHK conducted the data analysis and interpretation, which was supervised by SJH and CPL. JPW, CYW, and CPL provided the greatest contributions to writing the manuscript, although all authors took part in the data interpretation and drafting of the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. CPL had full access to all of the study data, and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the analysis.