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End-of-Life transfusion support at hospice and pediatric oncology unit: Bridging the gap between benefits and therapeutic alliance

Authors :
Nigro, Olga
Podda, Marta G
Pellegatta, Federico
Schiavello, Elisabetta
Clerici, Carlo A
Catalano, Igor
Visconti, Giovanna
Albarini, Marco
Luksch, Roberto
Terenziani, Monica
Ferrari, Andrea
Casanova, Michela
Biassoni, Veronica
Meazza, Cristina
Spreafico, Filippo
Gattuso, Giovanna
Sironi, Giovanna
Puma, Nadia
Bergamaschi, Luca
Chiaravalli, Stefano
Massimino, Maura
Source :
Tumori Journal; December 2023, Vol. 109 Issue: 6 pNP6-NP10, 5p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objectives: Although transfusion support is commonly used in oncological palliative care, there is still a paucity of literature. We examined the transfusion support provided in the terminal stage of the disease and compared the approach at a pediatric oncology unit and a pediatric hospice.Case description This case series analyzed patients treated at the Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori di Milano (INT)’s pediatric oncology unit who died between January 2018 and April 2022. We compared these with those who died at the VIDAS hospice and analyzed the number of complete blood counts taken in a patient’s last 14 days of life, and the number of transfusions performed in the same period. We analyzed 44 patients (22 in pediatric oncology unit; 22 in hospice) in total. Twenty-eight complete blood counts were performed (7/22 patients at the hospice; 21/22 patients at the pediatric oncology unit). Nine patients were given transfusions, three at the hospice, six at our pediatric oncology unit (24 transfusions in total): 20 transfusions at the pediatric oncology unit, four at the hospice. In total 17/44 patients were given active therapies in the last 14 days of life: 13 at the pediatric oncology unit, four at the pediatric hospice. Ongoing cancer treatments did not correlate with a greater likelihood of receiving a transfusion (p=0.91).Conclusions: The hospice’s approach was more conservative than the pediatric oncology one. In the in-hospital setting, the need for a transfusion cannot always be decided on by a combination of numerical values and parameters alone. The family’s emotional-relational response must be considered too.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03008916 and 20382529
Volume :
109
Issue :
6
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Tumori Journal
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs64793071
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/03008916231168670