Deakin University
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Diagnosis matters: the differing 
clinical trajectories for terminal prostate, 
lung and haematological cancers

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journal contribution
posted on 2015-07-01, 00:00 authored by Leeroy William, Kate Jackson, Adam Bostanci, Jennifer Ward, Peter MartinPeter Martin, Lise Pittman, Gaye Moore
BACKGROUND: There is a belief that end-of-life care issues are similar for all cancer patients, irrespective of their primary cancer diagnosis. This exploratory study into the terminal trajectories of three common cancers challenges this belief. METHODS: A retrospective, systematic, and mixed qualitative and quantitative medical record review of 30 deceased patients in 2010 was performed between two Victorian networks. The last 90 days of life were examined in three equally distributed cancer groups - prostate, lung and haematological. RESULTS: The trajectories for the three malignancies differed in temporal, symptomatic, supportive and interventional characteristics. DISCUSSION: Our study suggests diagnosis does indeed matter. The varying symptomatology for the different cancers markedly influenced clinical management, utilisation of palliative care services and the site of care and site of death. Our study suggests potential areas for better collaboration between general practitioners, community and specialist palliative care services. Emerging work supports our findings, but this area warrants further research.

History

Journal

Australian family physician

Volume

44

Issue

7

Pagination

479 - 484

Publisher

Royal Australian College of General

Location

East Melbourne, Vic.

ISSN

0300-8495

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Australian Family Physician

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