Advance Care Planning and Palliative Care Consultation in Kidney Transplantation

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF KIDNEY DISEASES(2024)

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摘要
Rationale & Objective: Because of the high risk of waitlist mortality and posttransplant complications, kidney transplant (KT) patients may benefit from advance care planning (ACP) and palliative care consultation (PCC). We quantified the prevalence and racial disparities in ACP and PCC among KT candidates and recipients. Study Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting & Participants: 2,575 adult KT candidates and 1,233 adult recipients (200 8-2020). Exposure: Race and ethnicity. Outcomes: All reports of ACP and PCC were abstracted from chart review. ACP was defined as patient self -report of an advance directive, presence of an advance directive in the medical record, or a documented goals -of -care conversation with a provider. PCC was defined as an ordered referral or a documented palliative care note in the medical record. Analytical Approach: Racial/ethnic disparities in ACP/PCC were estimated using adjusted logistic regression. Results: 21.4% of KT candidates and 34.9% of recipients engaged in ACP. There were racial/ ethnic disparities in ACP among KT candidates (White, 24.4%; Black, 19.1%; Hispanic, 15%; other race and ethnicity, 21.1%; P = 0.008) and recipients (White, 39.5%; Black, 31.2%; Hispanic, 26.3%; other race and ethnicity, 26.6%; = 0.007). After adjustment, Black KT recipients had a 29% lower likelihood of engaging in ACP (OR, 0.71; 95% CI, 0.550.91) than White KT recipients. Among older (aged >= 65 years) recipients, those who were Black had a lower likelihood of engaging in ACP, but there was no racial disparity among younger recipients (P = 0.020 for interaction). 4.2% of KT candidates and 5.1% of KT recipients engaged in PCC; there were no racial disparities in PCC among KT candidates (White, 5.3%; Black, 3.6%; Hispanic, 2.5%; other race and ethnicity, 2.1%; P = 0.13) or recipients (White, 5.5%; Black, 5.6%; Hispanic, 0.0%; other race and ethnicity, 1.3%; P = 0.21). Limitations: Generalizability may be limited to academic transplant centers. Conclusions: ACP is not common among KT patients, and minoritized transplant patients are least likely to engage in ACP; PCC is less common. Future efforts should aim to integrate ACP and PCC into the KT process.
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