Issue: November 2017
October 10, 2017
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Hospice Care May Come too Late for Patients With Chronic Liver Disease

Issue: November 2017
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Patients with chronic liver disease, such as nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, alcoholic liver disease and chronic hepatitis C, had significantly longer hospital length of stay, annual health care charges and shorter hospice length of stay compared with other patients, according to recently published data.

“Although many experts have advocated for the expansion of hospice care to persons dying of all chronic illnesses including those patients without cancer, patterns of health care use at the end of life remain uneven among diseases,” Natsu Fukui, MD, from the Inova Fairfax Hospital, Virginia, and colleagues wrote. “Unfortunately, studies have shown that only a small proportion of patients with CLD receive palliative care.”

To determine the characteristics of Medicare beneficiaries with CLD, the researchers evaluated 2,179 patients aged 65 years old or older with CLD who were discharged to hospice between 2010 and 2014. These patients were compared with 34,986 controls without CLD.

Compared with controls, patients with CLD were younger (mean age, 70 vs. 83 years; P < .001) and more likely to be eligible for Medicare due to disability rather than age (23.5% vs. 3.1%; P < .001) when discharged to hospice care.

Annually, patients with CLD had more hospital visits (2.73 vs. 1.97; P < .0001), longer hospital length of stay (19.35 vs. 13.02 days; P < .0001), higher total hospital charges ($175,281 vs. $108,999; P < .0001) and Medicare payments ($36,683 vs. $23,839; P < .0001), more 30-day readmissions (51.6% vs. 34.2%; P < .0001), and more hospital transfers (6.2% vs 2.5%; P < .0001) compared with controls before discharge.

In contrast, those with CLD had shorter hospice length of stay annually (13.68 vs. 17.65 days; P < .0001) compared with controls and were more likely to die in-hospice (88.8% vs. 84.7%; P < .0001) and within 1 year of discharge (96.6% vs. 94%; P < .0001).

Among all patients discharged to hospice, HCV and congestive heart failure were the strongest contributors to increased total annual hospital costs (34.6% and 31.4%, respectively; P < .001) and hospital length of stay (25.9% and 42.7%, respectively; P < .001). Similarly, HCV was a greater factor for total annual 30-day readmission (OR = 2.18; 95% CI, 1.8-2.6), as was congestive heart failure (OR = 2.19; 95% CI, 2.09-2.3), compared with other etiologies.

“Our findings support previous research showing that patients with chronic illnesses are generally referred to hospice late in their disease course, which may lead to inadequate time to benefit fully from hospice care. Our study further highlights the fact that this trend is substantially more prominent among patients with CLD. These results should raise awareness for timely hospice referral and incite conscious efforts to improve access to hospice services, which will be essential for enhancing the quality of end-of-life care of our patient with CLD.” – by Talitha Bennett

Disclosure: Fukui reports no relevant financial disclosures. Please see the full study for the other authors’ relevant financial disclosures.