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Palliative Medicine
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Hospice palliative care for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma in Taiwan

Ming-Hwai Lin

Pin-Yuan Wu

Shih-Tzu Tsai

Chiung-Ling Lin

Tzen-Wen Chen

Division of Hospice Palliative Care, Department of Family Medicine, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei, and National Yang-Ming University, Taipei

Shinn-Jang Hwang

Department of Family Medicine, Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taipei and National Yang-Ming University School of Medicine, Taipei and Taipei Municipal Yang-Ming Hospital, Taipei

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the leading causes of cancer death in Taiwan. In order to delineate the unique demographic features and clinical profile of terminal HCC, we conducted a retrospective study in a hospital-based hospice in Taiwan. Of a total of 991 terminally ill cancer patients (654 men and 337 women, mean age 66.1 years) admitted to our palliative care unit during a three-year period, 110 patients (11.1%) were diagnosed as having HCC (93 men and 17 women, mean age 60.5 years). The most common metastatic sites were bone and lung. Eighty-five HCC patients (77.3%) also had associated liver cirrhosis. The most common symptoms of HCC patients upon admission to the hospice ward were pain, fatigue or weakness, anorexia/vomiting, peripheral edema, cachexia, and ascites. Hypoalbuminemia, anemia, hyponatremia and jaundice were common laboratory abnormalities. Eighty-four patients (76.4%) required opiates for pain management. Upper gastrointestinal bleeding or varices bleeding developed in 76 patients (69.1%). Ninety-four patients (85.5%) died at the hospital, and the overall median survival time at hospice ward was 12 days. Because of more severe underlying portal hypertension and deteriorated liver function, terminal HCC patients with decompensated liver cirrhosis (Child-Pugh class C) had a significantly higher prevalence of peripheral edema, ascites, dyspnea, jaundice, thrombocytopenia, and stage III–IV hepatic encephalopathy than noncirrhotic or Child-Pugh class A and B terminal HCC patients. Symptoms and signs resulting from these portal hypertensions frequently complicated the symptomatic management of terminal HCC patients in the hospice ward. The treatment of these complications is mostly empirical in hospice ward, where intensive laboratory or diagnostic tests are usually not performed. In conclusion, symptoms and signs of terminally ill HCC patients in hospice are unique and should be managed appropriately.

Key Words: hepatocellular carcinoma • hospice • liver cirrhosis • palliative care • terminal care

Palliative Medicine, Vol. 18, No. 2, 93-99 (2004)
DOI: 10.1191/0269216304pm851oa


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