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Doctors
uncertain about approaches to care for very
sick Heart Failure patients
Newswise — Less than one fourth of
physicians specializing in geriatrics,
internal or family medicine or cardiology
believe they can accurately predict the
whether patients with heart failure are at
risk of dying, new Saint Louis University
research found.
The ability to determine whether patients
are within six months of death is crucial to
clinical care, impacting key patient-care
decisions such as therapeutic approaches and
referral for palliative care, which is
focused on symptom relief rather than cure
“Our findings are important not only in
light of the increasing prevalence of heart
failure in the United States but because the
data show that there are considerable gaps
in knowledge regarding end-stage heart
failure that ultimately affect a patient’s
experience with their illness,” says Paul
Hauptman, M.D., professor of internal
medicine at Saint Louis University School of
Medicine and the study’s lead author.
“Palliative measures can be adopted to ease
the pain of patients with terminal heart
failure, but these measures are not always
utilized because of uncertainty about the
patient’s prognosis. Unlike cancer, for
example, predicting death is not always
clear with end-stage heart failure.”
Across the board, physicians reported that
they were unlikely to refer a patient with
end-stage heart failure for hospice care.
Their reluctance was due in part to
uncertainty about timing and patient
acceptance of the recommendation.
“This study will provide valuable insight
into physicians’ beliefs and biases in
regards to end-stage heart failure,”
Hauptman said. “This area has not been
previously explored, but is essential if we
are to design interventions to help
physicians select appropriate care options
for their patients.”
Among the three specialties studied,
geriatricians were the most confident in
predicting six-month mortality. Physicians
who work in group practices, have large
clinical volume, and those who had formal
training in palliative care, express a
willingness to objectively measure
functional status and refer patients to
hospice care were more confident in
predicting six-month mortality.
End-stage heart failure or terminal heart
failure is characterized by fatigue,
shortness of breath, progressive muscle
wasting and inability to exercise despite
optimal medical and surgical therapy.
The study also provides insight into
existing knowledge gaps regarding
appropriate monitoring of patients and
selection of management options.
Very few physicians, for example, ask
patients to complete quality-of-life
questionnaires or objectively measure
functional status, two key factors that help
determine a patient’s status.
“This failure suggests that physicians may
not appropriately recognize the impact of
heart failure on their patients,” Hauptman
says.
The study also found that doctors rarely
discuss deactivating implantable
cardioverter defibrillators with very sick
heart failure patients and their families.
Implantable cardioverter defibrillators
detect cardiac arrhythmias and correct the
condition by delivering an electrical shock.
For people who are at risk of sudden cardiac
death, this device can be a life saver.
For patients with advanced heart disease,
though, an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
can cause unnecessary discomfort and stress
because it can continue to deliver shocks as
the patient is dying.
While the majority of physicians surveyed
agreed that deactivating the device is
appropriate with end-stage heart failure,
very few heed this advice.
Using a random stratified survey, 1,450
physicians (600 cardiologists, 300
geriatricians and 300 internal and family
medicine doctors), were polled for the
study. Approximately 60 percent of
physicians polled responded to the survey.
Co-authors of the study include Jason
Swindle, M.P.H., Zainal Hussain, M.D., and
Thomas Burroughs, Ph.D. of Saint Louis
University and Lois Biener Ph.D. of the
University of Massachusetts-Boston.
The study was funded by a grant from the
National Institute on Aging of the National
Institute for Health. The findings were
published in the February 2008 issue of The
American Journal of Medicine.
Established in 1836, Saint Louis University
School of Medicine has the distinction of
awarding the first medical degree west of
the Mississippi River.
The school educates physicians and
biomedical scientists, conducts medical
research, and provides health care on a
local, national and international level.
Research at the school seeks new cures and
treatments in five key areas: cancer, liver
disease, heart/lung disease, aging and brain
disease, and infectious disease.
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