Randomised clinical trial of early specialist palliative care plus standard care versus standard care alone in patients with advanced cancer: The Danish Palliative Care Trial

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Randomised clinical trial of early specialist palliative care plus standard care versus standard care alone in patients with advanced cancer : The Danish Palliative Care Trial. / Groenvold, Mogens; Petersen, Morten Aagaard; Damkier, Anette; Neergaard, Mette Asbjørn; Nielsen, Jan Bjoern; Pedersen, Lise; Sjøgren, Per; Strömgren, Annette Sand; Vejlgaard, Tove Bahn; Gluud, Christian; Lindschou, Jane; Fayers, Peter; Higginson, Irene J.; Johnsen, Anna Thit.

I: Palliative Medicine, Bind 31, Nr. 9, 01.10.2017, s. 814-824.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Groenvold, M, Petersen, MA, Damkier, A, Neergaard, MA, Nielsen, JB, Pedersen, L, Sjøgren, P, Strömgren, AS, Vejlgaard, TB, Gluud, C, Lindschou, J, Fayers, P, Higginson, IJ & Johnsen, AT 2017, 'Randomised clinical trial of early specialist palliative care plus standard care versus standard care alone in patients with advanced cancer: The Danish Palliative Care Trial', Palliative Medicine, bind 31, nr. 9, s. 814-824. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269216317705100

APA

Groenvold, M., Petersen, M. A., Damkier, A., Neergaard, M. A., Nielsen, J. B., Pedersen, L., Sjøgren, P., Strömgren, A. S., Vejlgaard, T. B., Gluud, C., Lindschou, J., Fayers, P., Higginson, I. J., & Johnsen, A. T. (2017). Randomised clinical trial of early specialist palliative care plus standard care versus standard care alone in patients with advanced cancer: The Danish Palliative Care Trial. Palliative Medicine, 31(9), 814-824. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269216317705100

Vancouver

Groenvold M, Petersen MA, Damkier A, Neergaard MA, Nielsen JB, Pedersen L o.a. Randomised clinical trial of early specialist palliative care plus standard care versus standard care alone in patients with advanced cancer: The Danish Palliative Care Trial. Palliative Medicine. 2017 okt. 1;31(9):814-824. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269216317705100

Author

Groenvold, Mogens ; Petersen, Morten Aagaard ; Damkier, Anette ; Neergaard, Mette Asbjørn ; Nielsen, Jan Bjoern ; Pedersen, Lise ; Sjøgren, Per ; Strömgren, Annette Sand ; Vejlgaard, Tove Bahn ; Gluud, Christian ; Lindschou, Jane ; Fayers, Peter ; Higginson, Irene J. ; Johnsen, Anna Thit. / Randomised clinical trial of early specialist palliative care plus standard care versus standard care alone in patients with advanced cancer : The Danish Palliative Care Trial. I: Palliative Medicine. 2017 ; Bind 31, Nr. 9. s. 814-824.

Bibtex

@article{3ce0f42f0096437eaeab68710205066f,
title = "Randomised clinical trial of early specialist palliative care plus standard care versus standard care alone in patients with advanced cancer: The Danish Palliative Care Trial",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Beneficial effects of early palliative care have been found in advanced cancer, but the evidence is not unequivocal.AIM: To investigate the effect of early specialist palliative care among advanced cancer patients identified in oncology departments.SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: The Danish Palliative Care Trial (DanPaCT) (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01348048) is a multicentre randomised clinical trial comparing early referral to a specialist palliative care team plus standard care versus standard care alone. The planned sample size was 300. At five oncology departments, consecutive patients with advanced cancer were screened for palliative needs. Patients with scores exceeding a predefined threshold for problems with physical, emotional or role function, or nausea/vomiting, pain, dyspnoea or lack of appetite according to the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30) were eligible. The primary outcome was the change in each patient's primary need (the most severe of the seven QLQ-C30 scales) at 3- and 8-week follow-up (0-100 scale). Five sensitivity analyses were conducted. Secondary outcomes were change in the seven QLQ-C30 scales and survival.RESULTS: Totally 145 patients were randomised to early specialist palliative care versus 152 to standard care. Early specialist palliative care showed no effect on the primary outcome of change in primary need (-4.9 points (95% confidence interval -11.3 to +1.5 points); p = 0.14). The sensitivity analyses showed similar results. Analyses of the secondary outcomes, including survival, also showed no differences, maybe with the exception of nausea/vomiting where early specialist palliative care might have had a beneficial effect.CONCLUSION: We did not observe beneficial or harmful effects of early specialist palliative care, but important beneficial effects cannot be excluded.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Mogens Groenvold and Petersen, {Morten Aagaard} and Anette Damkier and Neergaard, {Mette Asbj{\o}rn} and Nielsen, {Jan Bjoern} and Lise Pedersen and Per Sj{\o}gren and Str{\"o}mgren, {Annette Sand} and Vejlgaard, {Tove Bahn} and Christian Gluud and Jane Lindschou and Peter Fayers and Higginson, {Irene J.} and Johnsen, {Anna Thit}",
year = "2017",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1177/0269216317705100",
language = "English",
volume = "31",
pages = "814--824",
journal = "Palliative Medicine",
issn = "0269-2163",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Randomised clinical trial of early specialist palliative care plus standard care versus standard care alone in patients with advanced cancer

T2 - The Danish Palliative Care Trial

AU - Groenvold, Mogens

AU - Petersen, Morten Aagaard

AU - Damkier, Anette

AU - Neergaard, Mette Asbjørn

AU - Nielsen, Jan Bjoern

AU - Pedersen, Lise

AU - Sjøgren, Per

AU - Strömgren, Annette Sand

AU - Vejlgaard, Tove Bahn

AU - Gluud, Christian

AU - Lindschou, Jane

AU - Fayers, Peter

AU - Higginson, Irene J.

AU - Johnsen, Anna Thit

PY - 2017/10/1

Y1 - 2017/10/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: Beneficial effects of early palliative care have been found in advanced cancer, but the evidence is not unequivocal.AIM: To investigate the effect of early specialist palliative care among advanced cancer patients identified in oncology departments.SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: The Danish Palliative Care Trial (DanPaCT) (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01348048) is a multicentre randomised clinical trial comparing early referral to a specialist palliative care team plus standard care versus standard care alone. The planned sample size was 300. At five oncology departments, consecutive patients with advanced cancer were screened for palliative needs. Patients with scores exceeding a predefined threshold for problems with physical, emotional or role function, or nausea/vomiting, pain, dyspnoea or lack of appetite according to the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30) were eligible. The primary outcome was the change in each patient's primary need (the most severe of the seven QLQ-C30 scales) at 3- and 8-week follow-up (0-100 scale). Five sensitivity analyses were conducted. Secondary outcomes were change in the seven QLQ-C30 scales and survival.RESULTS: Totally 145 patients were randomised to early specialist palliative care versus 152 to standard care. Early specialist palliative care showed no effect on the primary outcome of change in primary need (-4.9 points (95% confidence interval -11.3 to +1.5 points); p = 0.14). The sensitivity analyses showed similar results. Analyses of the secondary outcomes, including survival, also showed no differences, maybe with the exception of nausea/vomiting where early specialist palliative care might have had a beneficial effect.CONCLUSION: We did not observe beneficial or harmful effects of early specialist palliative care, but important beneficial effects cannot be excluded.

AB - BACKGROUND: Beneficial effects of early palliative care have been found in advanced cancer, but the evidence is not unequivocal.AIM: To investigate the effect of early specialist palliative care among advanced cancer patients identified in oncology departments.SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: The Danish Palliative Care Trial (DanPaCT) (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01348048) is a multicentre randomised clinical trial comparing early referral to a specialist palliative care team plus standard care versus standard care alone. The planned sample size was 300. At five oncology departments, consecutive patients with advanced cancer were screened for palliative needs. Patients with scores exceeding a predefined threshold for problems with physical, emotional or role function, or nausea/vomiting, pain, dyspnoea or lack of appetite according to the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30) were eligible. The primary outcome was the change in each patient's primary need (the most severe of the seven QLQ-C30 scales) at 3- and 8-week follow-up (0-100 scale). Five sensitivity analyses were conducted. Secondary outcomes were change in the seven QLQ-C30 scales and survival.RESULTS: Totally 145 patients were randomised to early specialist palliative care versus 152 to standard care. Early specialist palliative care showed no effect on the primary outcome of change in primary need (-4.9 points (95% confidence interval -11.3 to +1.5 points); p = 0.14). The sensitivity analyses showed similar results. Analyses of the secondary outcomes, including survival, also showed no differences, maybe with the exception of nausea/vomiting where early specialist palliative care might have had a beneficial effect.CONCLUSION: We did not observe beneficial or harmful effects of early specialist palliative care, but important beneficial effects cannot be excluded.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1177/0269216317705100

DO - 10.1177/0269216317705100

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28494643

VL - 31

SP - 814

EP - 824

JO - Palliative Medicine

JF - Palliative Medicine

SN - 0269-2163

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 178604293