Penn Medicine News: Penn Medicine Researchers Awarded $27.5 Million for Large Palliative Care Study
From Penn Medicine News:
Palliative care is medical care that focuses on reducing suffering and improving quality of life for patients with serious illnesses, and a large new study aims to help determine how to best improve the efficacy and reach of this type of care in the hospital setting. A research team from the Palliative and Advanced Illness Research (PAIR) Center in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania has been approved for a $27.5 million funding award from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) for the study, led by Scott D. Halpern, MD, PhD, the John M. Eisenberg Professor of Medicine, Epidemiology, and Medical Ethics and Health Policy, and Kate Courtright, MD, MS, an assistant professor of Critical Care and Palliative Medicine.
National guidelines recommend that clinicians provide palliative care as a standard part of care for serious illnesses—which affect millions of Americans and their families—and studies have shown that palliative care delivery improves outcomes for seriously ill hospitalized patients. Palliative care also helps patients and their loved ones spend more of their time pursuing their life goals without symptoms or other burdens.
However, the best way to deliver palliative care for hospitalized patients with chronic, incurable, or life-limiting diseases remains uncertain. There aren’t enough palliative care specialists to reach all patients in need, a problem that is expected to grow as the population ages and more people are affected by serious illnesses. One solution may be to train and prompt generalists—the nurses, advanced practice providers, physicians, and social workers who make up a patient’s primary hospital team—to provide palliative care themselves. But while this approach should be able to reach more patients, it’s unknown if this would be as effective as specialist-led care, or which patients might benefit most from which approach.
“As the need for palliative care continues to grow with the aging baby boomer population, it is critical to determine how to most effectively and equitably meet this need,” said Halpern, who is also the founding director of the PAIR Center. “With this large study, we hope to provide enough data to help health systems across the United States understand how to effectively scale and deliver palliative care so that it can have the greatest impact for all hospitalized patients.”
The randomized clinical trial, expected to launch in fall 2025 and last two and a half years, will include more than 43,000 seriously ill patients who are predicted to have at least a 50% chance of dying within the next year and who are admitted to 48 hospitals across 17 states in two of the largest health systems in the U.S. The hospitals in the study will be randomly assigned to one of three arms: usual care, interventions to train generalist clinicians to provide palliative care and to nudge them to use their new skills, or interventions to nudge increased uptake of specialist palliative care consultation. With this design, the investigators hope to assess both how effective each type of care is and what percentage of eligible patients are reached by each strategy.
The study is designed to enroll a large, diverse cohort of patients, so that the investigators can also measure outcomes across subgroups, including race, gender, age, diagnosis, and social determinants of health. In addition to being one of the largest studies of its kind for palliative care, the project also represents one of the largest clinical trials to use a Learning Health System approach. This emerging model of continuous learning and improvement centers on the idea of systemically gathering and creating evidence and actively applying that knowledge to improve care.
Read more at Penn Medicine News.