Abstract
The presence of acute or chronic respiratory failure is often seen as a terminal phase of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. A great variability in end-of-life practice is observed in these patients mainly because physicians are not always able to correctly predict survival. There is a need for a clear discussion about decision making earlier than when acute respiratory failure ensues. Indeed, a perceived poor quality of life does not necessarily correlate with a clear willingness to refuse invasive or noninvasive mechanical ventilation. It has been suggested to start palliative care earlier, together with curative and restorative care, when there is an increased intensity of symptoms. The patients eligible for palliative care are those complaining of breathlessness, pain, fatigue and depression, which in some studies accounted for a prevalence much higher than 50%. Among comfort measures for palliation, oxygen is frequently prescribed even when the criteria for long-term home oxygen therapy are not met; however, when compared with air, no benefits on dyspnoea have been found. The only drug with a proven effect on dyspnoea is morphine, but not when it is delivered with a nebuliser. Finally, noninvasive ventilation may be used only as a comfort measure for palliation to maximise comfort by minimising adverse effects.
In Europe, attention to end-of-life care in the hospital setting, especially in the intensive care unit (ICU), has only increased in the last decade. A Medline search, conducted by the authors of this review in December 2011, found that more than 1,000 articles related to end-of-life care were published between 2001 and 2008 (fig. 1), compared with only 336 published before 2001. These studies were mainly published in North America, even though in more recent years the problem of end-of-life care has also gained a lot of attention in Europe and the rest of the world. Unfortunately, very few studies were performed in patients affected by chronic respiratory diseases, both in the phase of clinical stability or during an acute exacerbation of their diseases [1].
THE DEFINITIONS OF END-OF-LIFE DECISIONS
During the period at the end of life, potentially important decisions are needed. However, the correct definition of each possible intervention is extremely important and often a matter of debate among clinicians, bio-ethicists, religious figures and politicians. The following definitions are taken from the International Consensus Conference on challenges in end-of-life care in the ICU published in 2004 [2].
Withholding: a planned decision not to introduce therapies that are otherwise warranted (i.e. intubation, renal replacement therapy, increased doses of vasopressor infusions, surgery, transfusion, nutrition and hydration).
Withdrawal: discontinuation of treatments that have been started (i.e. decreasing inspiratory oxygen fraction to 21%, extubation, turning off the ventilator and suspending the vasopressors).
Terminal sedation: pain and symptom treatment with the possible side-effect of shortening life.
Euthanasia: from the Greek words eu and thanatos meaning “good death”. It means that a doctor is intentionally killing a person who is suffering unbearably and hopelessly at the latter's voluntary, explicit, repeated, well-considered and informed request.
Physician-assisted suicide: means that a doctor is intentionally helping/assisting/co-operating in the suicide of a person who is suffering unbearably and hopelessly at the latter's voluntary, explicit, repeated, well-considered and informed request. These acts do not include withholding or withdrawing treatments although these may occur prior to physician-assisted suicide.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation failure: defined as death despite the use of a ventilator or cardiac massage.
Brain death: documented cessation of cerebral function and meeting the criteria for brain death.
Palliative care: any interventions aimed to prevent and relieve suffering by controlling symptoms and providing other support to patients and families in order to maintain and improve their quality of living during all stages of chronic life-threatening (or terminal) illness.
End-of-life care: is the care (comfort, supportive or symptom care) provided to a person in their final stages of life.
The Consensus Conference also highlighted the problem that many of the words used are imprecise or ambiguous, e.g. passive euthanasia and terminal weaning, and they may reflect specific religious orientations. For example, the termination of a continuous life-sustaining treatment, such as mechanical ventilation, is prohibited according to Jewish law or Halacha (followed mainly by Orthodox Jews), so that withdrawal is considered “passive euthanasia” [3]. A similar view was recently expressed by the Roman Catholic Church [4].
The overall incidence of these practices in Europe is only partially known, but there are important differences between countries or regions, reflecting the absence of a common strategy even within the European Community. For example, in 2002, in the Netherlands, the Euthanasia Act legalised euthanasia in a patient who is suffering unbearably with no prospect of improvement if all the due care criteria are fulfilled. Euthanasia is used most often in the Netherlands for patients with malignant disease. However, euthanasia was also performed in a patient with end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) [5] to end his or her life in dignity after having received every type of curative and palliative care available.
Indeed our societies are increasingly multicultural and multiracial, with a diversity of religious beliefs, whereas deficiencies in end-of-life care tend to be more pronounced in ethnic minority populations [6]. Recognising this pluralism is, therefore, fundamental to the provision of high- quality end-of-life care. Of interest, <15% of ICU patients retain decision making capacity so it is impossible to discuss the decision with them, while rarely the patient's family are involved in the decision and when this is the case the relatives rate the communication with hospital staff as poor [7]. Concerning the problem of patients affected by chronic pulmonary disorders, the 2008 National COPD Audit identified that only 13% of units provide information to severe COPD patients when they are stable and <25% of patients with oxygen dependence have discussed care with medical staff [8]. So, it was apparent that COPD patients typically receive little information, but information is essential for people making choices about their care. At last it was obvious that it was inappropriate to discuss these issues during exacerbation, but this is typically when such discussions occur [9].
THE PATIENT WITH END-STAGE COPD
The presence of acute or chronic respiratory failure is often seen as a terminal phase of this disease. Ethical problems about the treatment of acute exacerbation of end-stage COPD are increasingly topical, especially in respiratory units and the ICU. It is well known, in fact, that once one of these patients is intubated several factors may lead to a poor prognosis. Age, respiratory muscle weakness, hypercapnia, hypoxia, malnutrition, treatment with corticosteroids or other agents, haemodynamic instability and activity limits due to respiratory disorders may, for example, lead to difficulties in the weaning process [10]. A prospective, multicentre cohort study before the era of noninvasive ventilation (NIV) showed that patients with COPD admitted to an ICU for an acute exacerbation and who were aged >65 yrs had a mortality rate of 30%, which doubled after 1 yr to 60% [11]. A more recent retrospective study aiming to evaluate the long-term survival of patients being treated with NIV for the first time showed that survival at 1, 2 and 5 yrs was 72%, 52% and 26%, respectively [12]. The survival rate was also influenced by the need for readmission; those who required readmission had a 20% chance of survival at 5 yrs [13]. Once these chronically ill patients have recovered from the most acute phase of their critical illness they are still likely to require intensive nursing and/or physiotherapy for several weeks [14]. Although several studies showed that either invasive ventilation [15] or NIV [16] could be used to achieve an acceptable survival rate, we also know that once discharged, when this is feasible, most patients describe their quality of life as rather poor or poor after leaving the hospital, while in ∼20% of cases the last 6 months of life are spent inside a hospital or similar protected environment [17]. Indeed almost half of these patients die in hospital, most of them in the ICU, which is probably the worst environment to spend the last few days of life, due to the lack of privacy and the restricted policy of visiting from the relatives [18].
All this knowledge leads to the general perception that the outcome of COPD patients requiring mechanical ventilation is poor, thus, negatively influencing the choice to admit a patient in ICU. Moreover, a multicentre study in European ICUs showed that a chronic respiratory disease is a strong predictor of withholding and withdrawing therapies inversely, for example, for the use of cardiopulmonary resuscitation [19]. However, a great variability in the end-of-life practice was observed between countries. In a recent survey carried out in European respiratory intermediate care units, the prediction of a low probability of hospital survival or poor functional status following hospital discharge, as estimated by the attending physician, were the main reasons for withholding therapy [20]. However, physicians are not always able to correctly predict the survival of a patient. A study comparing mortality at 180 days as predicted by clinicians for patients with an exacerbation of COPD with the actual 180-day mortality found that clinicians are generally pessimistic about the survival prospects and have specific problems in identifying those with poor prognosis [21]. Table 1 illustrates the main obstacles and common beliefs that may determine ICU refusal in COPD patients. All these problems are unique features in the acute setting and highlight a need to approach a clear discussion about decision making earlier and in a stable phase. It must be considered that, in this context, perceived poor quality of life from the patient does not necessarily correlate with a clear willingness to refuse invasive mechanical ventilation in case of a severe acute respiratory failure. Stapleton et al. [22] showed that in COPD patients whose severity at enrolment was defined only by the need for 24-h home oxygen, the health status as measured by the St George’s Respiratory Questionnaire was not associated with end-of-life treatment preferences. This means that physicians should not assume that a poor health status is associated with a higher likelihood of refusing life-sustaining treatment. To avoid the possibility that only clinical judgment and “perception” by the physician could be the major drivers for treatment choice, a recent consensus on palliative care for patients with respiratory diseases recommended that palliative care include identification of, and respect for, the preferences of patients and families [23]. This highlights the need for clear patient–physician communication. However, surveys conducted on patients with oxygen-dependent severe COPD showed that only a small proportion of them (32%) discuss the type of care they would want in the event they were too sick to take a decision with their physicians [24]. Patients complain that most physicians do not discuss how long the patients have to live, what dying might be like or spiritual issues [7]. Another important point is the identification of the timing of and when to raise the issue of end-of-life care. At present we do not have predictive parameters of short-term mortality in COPD patients. In a recent review, Curtis [25] speculated that a patient with two or more of the following characteristics could be a good candidate for end-of-life discussion: forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) <30% predicted; oxygen dependence; one or more hospital admissions in the previous year for an acute exacerbation of COPD; left heart failure or other comorbidities; weight loss or cachexia; decreased functional status; increasing dependence on others; and age >70 yrs. This method of identifying a patient who should be considered an "ideal" candidate for palliative care may be subject to criticism. We know, for example, that dyspnoea is not necessarily correlated to FEV1, so that a patient with an FEV1 >30% pred could complain of more symptoms than a patient with more severe airways obstruction [26]. However, it has been shown that COPD patients on long-term oxygen who have never previously required intensive care admission have a similar health status and cognitive function than COPD patients 6 months after discharge and recovery from an acute on chronic respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation [27]. Recently, a decision tree (CART) to identify patients at high-mortality risk in the next 5 yrs was proposed and validated [28]. This model takes into account five easily obtained parameters in clinical practice: age, FEV1, dyspnoea, physical activity and number of hospital admissions in the previous 2 yrs. The ability of the CART to predict mortality was tested in a validation cohort and it seems to be quite similar to other prediction scores, such as BODE (body mass index, degree of airway obstruction, dyspnoea, exercise capacity), but it also takes into account some new important clinical variables such as physical activity and previous hospitalisations, which could also strongly affect the mortality rate of the COPD patient.
Table 2 summarises the suggested definitions of end-stage COPD patients.
WHEN SHOULD PALLIATION IN END-STAGE COPD BE STARTED?
If the score could be used to identify patients with whom to discuss end-of-life treatments, it might not be so sensitive to identify patients who need mainly palliative support to relieve dyspnoea and other symptoms. For this reason, the aforementioned consensus [23] suggests to start palliative care earlier, together with curative and restorative care, when there is an increased intensity of the symptoms according to patient's and family's perception or when an acute exacerbation occurs. In other words, palliative care should be available at any point in time during the course of chronic respiratory disease when the patient becomes symptomatic. This means that it is necessary to define other criteria to identify the patient candidate for palliative care, since the goal of palliative care is also to identify and treat pathology-related symptoms. In fact, it is widely known that COPD patients complain of symptoms like breathlessness, pain, fatigue and depression that in some studies accounted for a prevalence much higher than 50% [29]. Some studies compared the health status of COPD patient with patients affected by cancer. The latter patients have access to multidisciplinary palliative care focused on supporting the patient and their family to maintain a reasonable quality of life. In one of these studies the authors demonstrated that severe stable COPD (FEV1 <0.75 L and at least one previous episode of hypercapnic acute respiratory failure) had a significantly worse health status (physical, social and emotional) and worse activities of daily living than those with nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Furthermore, they had symptoms of anxiety and depression to a significantly greater extent than the patients with NSCLC. Although nearly 90% of COPD patients had a Health Anxiety and Depression Scale score strongly suggestive for clinical depression and anxiety, only 4% of these patients were receiving pharmacological treatment [30]. Previous studies showed that depressive symptoms were significantly associated with refusal of life-sustaining treatment in oxygen-dependent COPD patients [22] and that symptom improvement after ad hoc pharmacological treatment could lead to a different preference about end-of-life treatment [31]. However, depressive symptoms were also found to be strong predictors of mortality in COPD patients (adjusted hazard risk 1.93) after correction for other risk variables [32]. Moreover, depression was not associated with severity of airflow obstruction and its decline at 1 yr, which means once more that the respiratory function severity alone cannot predict the best candidate for palliative care.
Unfortunately, the provision of palliative care for COPD patients in Europe is variable, and overall very small. In a survey performed in the UK, ∼21.5% of the respondents had formal policies in place for the care of patients with chronic respiratory disease nearing the end of life, but 87.9% of respondents had no formal process for initiating end-of-life discussions with those with terminal respiratory illness [33]. In the UK, patients with advanced non-malignant respiratory disease have less universal access to specialist palliative care services than those with malignant lung disease, and in the majority of hospitals there is no formalised approach to end-of-life care issues with patients with chronic lung disease.
In another UK survey, only 49% of units had a formal referral pathway for palliative care and only 13% had a policy of initiating end-of-life discussions with appropriate patients [34].
Indeed, an Irish study [35] showed that key barriers towards the delivery of palliative care for COPD patients included the reluctance to negotiate end-of-life decisions and a perceived lack of understanding among patients and carers regarding the illness trajectory. Consequently, the delivery of palliative care was viewed as a specialist role rather than an integral component of care.
THE INTERVENTIONS
Table 3 summarises the potential palliative treatment for end-stage COPD patients.
Quality of life measurement is an important aspect of palliative care, given that maximising this item is the main aim of this type of care. A large variety of quality of life measurement instruments are appropriate for use in palliative care, but unfortunately most have not been adequately evaluated so the effectiveness of the pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions is not always easy to assess [36]. Palliative care may be considered as a set of interventions aimed to recognise and treat symptoms; therefore, encompassing all the actions needed to treat fatigue, breathlessness and pain, and the other complains that the patients may experience. The official American Thoracic Society (ATS) Clinical Policy Statement on Palliative Care [23] stated that treatment should focus on both the psychological and physical components of dyspnoea, and rely on visual or analogue dyspnoea scales to assess the severity of symptoms and effects of treatment. Therefore, pharmacological treatments proposed for COPD at different stages of the pathology are mainly aimed to improve dyspnoea, exercise tolerance and possibly rate of exacerbation.
Rehabilitation
Clinical guidelines for the management of patients with COPD have also made clear recommendations about non-pharmacological treatment, such as rehabilitation, in stable COPD based on high levels of research evidence. A rehabilitation programme significantly improves exercise capacity and health-related quality of life, and reduces the perceived intensity of breathlessness and decreases anxiety and depression associated with COPD with a level A of evidence [37].
Noninvasive ventilation
On the same line, even if unable to demonstrate improved survival in chronic COPD, long-term NIV was able to, according to several studies, improve quality of life and dyspnoea measured by the Medical Research Council scale [38, 39]. However, a pilot study [40] and a recent document about the application of NIV in different settings [41] recognised an important role of NIV as a palliative tool, merely aimed to treat dyspnoea when acute respiratory distress or failure ensues [42].
The need for mechanical support is theoretically the main intervention when an organ is failing beyond a point in which any pharmacological intervention is ineffective or partially effective. This is true for the kidney, lung and even the heart. The problem is understanding in the clinical practice as to when mechanical support may be futile.
Failure of weaning from invasive mechanical ventilation is one of the major clinical problems in COPD patients. In one study these “chronically critically ill” patients, representing only 3% of the total number of patients admitted to the ICU, used almost 40% of the total patient days of care [17]. The manner in which this relatively small population cuts into hospital costs has drawn the attention of experts in the field, thus, Seneffet al. [11] have openly stated that, “there is some level of costs of acute care that is beyond our society's economic capacity”. Does this mean that a patient with advanced COPD always “deserves” an end-of-life care decision? The general perception is that the outcome of COPD patients requiring mechanical ventilation is poor, despite several studies in which invasive ventilation [20] or NIV [21] was employed to demonstrate an acceptable survival rate [43].
With the introduction of NIV to treat acute respiratory failure of different aetiologies 20 yrs ago, classical outcome measures such as hospital mortality, need for endotracheal intubation, complications of invasive ventilation and length of hospital stay have been drastically improved. The feasibility and usefulness of NIV in the palliative care of patients with acute respiratory failure near the end of their lives is still not well demonstrated [41]. Frequently, NIV is also used for those patients with terminal diseases to help alleviate respiratory distress and attempt to provide some additional time, for example to say goodbye to their relatives and friends or to solve some administration issues, but most of the clinicians are unclear about the goals of care. For example, it has been highlighted that NIV may be inappropriate in this context because of an increased use of medical resources, prolongation of the dying process and intensification of suffering [42]. The Society of Critical Care Medicine suggested an approach based on explicating the goal of care, emphasising the importance of information and communication among patients, family and clinicians. They reviewed three potential goals and alternative clinical scenarios. First, life support without limits, whereby the primary goal is to assist ventilation and reduce the risk of intubation and mortality, eventually restoring health. The aim is to restore health without using endotracheal intubation and without causing unacceptable discomfort [42]. Secondly, life support with limit, whereby the goal is to restore health without using endotracheal intubation and the response to failure is mainly to palliate symptoms without using NIV. Finally, comfort measures for palliation to maximise comfort and minimise adverse effects [42]. In a multicentre, randomised controlled trial comparing oxygen therapy versus NIV in end-stage solid cancer patients, this latter procedure reduced dyspnoea and respiratory rate faster, while less morphine was needed, preserving the patient's mental integrity [44].
So there is a need to facilitate the decision concerning NIV or any other form of mechanical ventilation. When the patients are well informed they are generally satisfied with the decision that has been made and don't change their mind in the meantime [45].
Therefore, the decision to commence mechanical ventilation in end-stage COPD needs the active participation of the patient. Physicians and educators should target patients with COPD to improve patients’ education about diagnosis and the disease process together with the explanation of the treatments, prognosis, what dying might be like and advance care planning. To address these issues Dales et al. [45] developed and tested an aid to assist patients with decisions about mechanical ventilation. A scenario-based decision aid was developed, consisting of an audiocassette and a booklet describing intubation and mechanical ventilation and its possible outcomes. The authors used a probability trade-off technique to elicit the patients' preferences and a decisional conflict scale to evaluate satisfaction. With the assistance of the decision aid, all patients (10 male and 10 females) reached a decision. Two males and all 10 females declined mechanical ventilation. Mean decisional conflict was low (2.2 out of a maximum of 5). At 1 yr, only two (11%) patients had changed their decisions. The agreement between physicians and patients was 65%; between next-of-kin and patients, however, there was uniform disagreement. From this study it maybe concluded that when discussed and explained in detail, an end-of-life decision is stable in time while the patients achieve satisfaction and confidence. Proxy decisions were incongruent, especially when made by family members; however, the strong sex effect suggested a call for further investigation.
Oxygen
Among comfort measures for palliation, oxygen is frequently prescribed even when the criteria for long-term home oxygen therapy is not met because of the sensation of breathlessness, which is a devastating symptom and causes distress for the patient and the caregivers [46]. However, in COPD patients, treatment with oxygen compared with air has been found to have a small beneficial effect on dyspnoea [47]; oxygen is not effective in reducing the sensation of dyspnoea in cancer patients, even during exercise [48, 49].
Opioids
The only drugs with a proven effect on dyspnoea are opioids. Opioid receptors are found in high densities in the brain stem and may exert an inhibitory influence on respiratory drive mainly mediated by mu receptors. Moreover, opioids have anxiolytic properties further diminishing dyspnoea. Indeed, they may reduce effects of arterial carbon dioxide and oxygen levels on ventilation, and reduce oxygen consumption at rest [50]. However, most of the studies on the effects of opioids on dyspnoea were performed in patients with end-stage cancer. For example, a systematic review by Jennings et al. [51] supports the continued use of oral and parenteral opioids to treat dyspnoea in patients with advanced disease. There are insufficient data from the meta-analysis to conclude whether nebulised opioids are effective, but the results from included studies that did not contribute to the meta-analysis suggest that they are no better than nebulised normal saline. Of particular interest, the results of the subgroup analysis of the COPD studies were essentially similar to the results of the main analysis. More recently, and after the publication of the meta-analysis, a randomised, double-blind placebo-controlled trial [52] was performed in patients with refractory dyspnoea, the large majority of patients being affected by COPD. The patients were randomised to 4 days of 20 mg oral morphine with sustained release followed by 4 days of identically formulated placebo, or vice versa. Participants reported significantly different dyspnoea scores, both in the morning and in the evening, when treated with morphine. During the period in which they were taking morphine, participants also reported better sleep but also distressing constipation in spite of using laxatives. Juan et al. [53] investigated in an open label clinical study whether epidural methadone perfusion at the thoracic level can mitigate dyspnoea in patients with advanced emphysema. They showed that this method effectively palliates dyspnoea and improves exercise capacity and quality of life in these patients, without deterioration in respiratory control or lung function. The authors concluded that modulation of spinal cord afferent signalling is an appropriate novel target for dyspnoea control in chronic respiratory disease.
However, the Global Initiative for Chronic Lung Disease (GOLD) guidelines have specifically stated that opioids are contraindicated in COPD management due to potential respiratory depression and worsening hypercapnia. However, several investigations have found no evidence that the appropriate use of these drugs hastens death [54–56], despite the “principle of double effect” addressing the potential for harm by use of opioids in palliative care [57]. As stated in the ATS Clinical Policy Statement on Palliative Care [23], this principle holds that relief of suffering is adequate justification for the use of opioids to control dyspnoea or pain, and that hastening death by the use of opioids, if it occurs, is morally acceptable provided that the intent of the physician or nurse is confined to relief of dyspnoea. Consistent with this principle, healthcare providers should titrate the dose of opioid to its effect in relieving dyspnoea, i.e. dosing interval and quantity based on frequent symptom assessment using a dyspnoea scale or physiological manifestations of dyspnoea. “Morphinophobia” among clinicians and the general population, however, leads to the inappropriate management of pain and dyspnoea, at least in some countries [58].
Management of secretions
Mucolytics and occasional courses of antibiotics may be useful adjuncts in decreasing dyspnoea for patients with excess tenacious secretions [59]. No data about the management of airway secretion during end-stage chronic respiratory illness are available. During a mild acute exacerbation the use of a mechanical aid dedicated to secretion removal is effective in avoiding further deterioration and the need for ventilator support either invasively or noninvasively [60]. In overt hypercapnic respiratory failure needing ventilator support, Antonagliaet al. [61] showed that two daily sessions of intrapulmonary percussive ventilation through a mouthpiece with a helmet during NIV could decrease the duration of ventilator treatment and ICU stay. These may not necessarily be the outcomes of end-of-life care, but the study demonstrated a feasibility of this mucus clearance strategy in COPD patients.
In conclusion, a COPD patient with a documented progressive decline of respiratory function and health status should be taken into account with the aim to recognise all clinically evident symptoms, treat them in the best way and continuously discuss the patient's wishes about end-of life treatment.
Footnotes
Provenance
Submitted article, peer reviewed.
Statement of Interest
None declared.
- Received February 23, 2012.
- Accepted March 16, 2012.
- ©ERS 2012